There was a sense of menace as the sky grew darker.
天色渐暗,有一种恐怖的氛围。
3[countableC]ANNOY a person, especially a child, who is annoying or causes trouble 讨厌鬼,捣蛋鬼〔尤指小孩〕SYN nuisance
My little brother’s a real menace.
我的小弟弟真是个捣蛋鬼。
4with menacesBritish EnglishBrE law if someone asks another person for something with menaces, they use threats of violence to get what they want 恐吓地,威胁地
He was charged with demanding money with menaces.
他被指控勒索钱财。
Examples from the Corpus
with menaces• The driver of the Vauxhall had got out of her car and was advancingwith menaces.
growing menace• A growing menace in Verdon is the determination of many climbers to lower down a pitch and then be top-roped up it.• After the war MI5 turned its attention to the growing menace of Bolshevism which the government feared would soon engulf the country.
menace• The mask made him seem menacing, and she suddenly had the sensation that with Lucenzo she was playing with fire.• She was afraid to move; on all sides she was menaced by the half-open doors of empty rooms.• The whole community has been living in fear for far too long, menaced equally by both sets of paramilitaries.• Circuits in computers and other control instrumentation can likewise act as unintended receivers, menacing the operation of whole manufacturing plants.
From Longman Business Dictionary
menacemen·ace /ˈmenɪs/ noun [countableC]
something that is dangerous
Many people think that overseas competition is the biggest menace to the industry.
Originmenace1
(1300-1400)FrenchLatinminacia, from minari“to threaten”