3.somebody’s eyes are out on stalksBritish EnglishBrE informalSURPRISEDSHOCK if your eyes are out on stalks, you are very surprised or shocked 某人眼珠子都要掉出来了〔形容非常吃惊或震惊〕
2[transitiveT] to follow and watch someone over a long period of time in a way that is very annoying or threatening, and that is considered a crime in some places 〔以令人讨厌或生畏的方式〕跟踪,盯梢
She was stalked by an obsessed fan.
她被一名痴迷的崇拜者跟踪。
3[intransitiveI always + adverbadv/prepositionprep]WALK to walk in a proud or angry way, with long steps 〔高傲或气愤地〕高视阔步地走,大踏步走
stalk out/off/away
Yvonne turned and stalked out of the room in disgust.
伊冯娜转过身,厌恶地大步走出房间。
4[transitiveT] literary if something bad stalks a place, you see or feel it everywhere in that place 〔不好的气氛〕笼罩,蔓延
stalk out/off/away• Finally, my temper spent, I stalked away.• She stalked off across the road, her hat jammed firmly on her head and her mouth set in a mutinous line.• She waited until it had stalked away before picking up the remains of the Geiger-Muller counter and dropping them into the holdall.• She stalks out of the locker room and into a knot of sportsreporters.• Yvonne turned and stalked out of the room in disgust.• With that, he stalked out of the room.• Jody stalked off the court looking for the culprits.• She stalked off to her trailer, but he could see by her walk that she was feeling better.• I turned and stalked away to the servants' quarters.
Originstalk1
(1300-1400) Perhaps from stale“step of a ladder, long handle”((11-19 centuries)), from Old Englishstalu