‘Don’t go to sleep, ’ she said, prodding me in the ribs.
“别睡着。”她边说边捅我的肋骨。
prod at
Theo prodded at the dead snake.
西奥戳了戳那条死蛇。
2PERSUADEto make someone do something by persuading or reminding them that it is necessary, especially when they are lazy or unwilling 激励;促使,督促
prod somebody into (doing) something
It had prodded Ben into doing something about it.
那件事促使本要做点什么。
The strike may prod the government into action.
那场罢工可能会促使政府采取行动。
—prodding noun [uncountableU]
He’s a bright kid, but he needs prodding.
他是个聪明孩子,但需要督促。
Examples from the Corpus
prod• They walked around him, prodding and pinching him.• But the Senate, prodded by Hatch and Kennedy, took the proposal further.• People gathered round, prodding her for news.• His wifeprodded him for years before he began writing his first novel.• The male now carefully monitors the temperature of the mound by prodding his beak into it.• In the second month of the class she began to prod the class toward the intermediatestage.• Léonie prodded the foam with one finger.• And he will prod the party to think twice about shrinking the scope of government.• The surgeonprodded the shiveryflesh, searching for the tumour that must be removed.• Sergeant Thompson raised his stick and prodded the soldier in the chest.• So Iverson kept prodding them, pulling them, urging them to show they belong.
cattle prod• I, on the other hand, had backache and climbed it as though a cattle prod were taped to my spine.• She was strippednaked and beaten with a cattle prod before being thrown into a cell full of excrement.• A cattle prod, that would be the thing.• He stands up and starts threatening Paul with an imaginary cattle prod.• And these, said Perdita, are the cattle prods.
Originprod2
(1500-1600) Perhaps from brod“pointed stick for making an animal go forward”((14-19 centuries)), probably from Old Norsebroddr“spike”