2.blot your copybookBritish EnglishBrE informalSPOIL to do something that spoils the idea that people have of you 玷污自己的名声
Examples from the Corpus
blot your copybook• Mustn't blot my copybook by being late.
3blot something ↔ outphrasal verbphr v
a)HIDE/MAKE IT HARD TO FIND OR SEEto cover or hide something completely 把…遮住,遮盖;涂去;隐藏
Thick white smoke blotted out the sun.
白色的浓烟遮住了太阳。
b)if you blot out an unpleasantmemory, a thought etc, you deliberately try to forget it 抹去,有意地忘记〔不快的记忆、想法等〕
She said she took drugs to blot out her problems.
她说她吸毒是为了排遣烦恼。
Examples from the Corpus
blot out• Actually he was a very nice man, cheerful and good-natured, but the other side of him blotted it all out.• Covered the sky, blotted it right out.• I've got to blot him out.• I use smack to blot things out.• Sandie closes her eyes and blots it out.• Would the daughter even remember her father with the perpetualpresence of Hope to blot him out?• The washing of the northernblots was carried outaccording to standard methods.• She longed to blot it out, pretend the last few months had never happened.
4.blot something ↔ upphrasal verbphr vDRYto removeliquid from a surface by pressingsoft paper or cloth onto it 〔用软纸或布〕吸干,擦干
blot• Would the daughter even remember her father with the perpetualpresence of Hope to blot him out?• Covered the sky, blotted it right out.• Any surface oil not absorbed after 10-15 minutes should be blotted off with a tissue.• But the last 16 minutes blotted out all the blundering and turned this into an unforgettableclassic.• By the time I reached the small town of Pinedale the blue sky had been blotted out by ugly, sulphurousyellow.• A stage-a melee-heaving bodies-and then a huge hand filled the screen and blotted out everything for an instant.• Maybe I was blotting out my past, as provincials do, in my haste to get to where the action was.• Kendall and his shadowblotted the tunnel ahead.
blot2 noun [countableC]
1MARKa mark or dirtyspot on something, especially made by ink 〔尤指墨水弄成的〕污点,污渍
ink blots• Symmetry Symmetry requires mirrorimagery, on the principle of the child's folded ink blots.• On the other side of the map there were several pictures which, from a distance, looked like ink blots.