4.have/hold/want no truck with somebody/somethingAVOIDto refuse to be involved with someone or to accept an idea 拒不与某人打交道/拒不接受某个观点
Examples from the Corpus
have/hold/want no truck with somebody/something• Its radicals, who dominate the leadership, want no truck with Mr Gorbachev.• We in the Conservative Party have no truck with that style of gutterjournalism which we were forced to endure last Sunday.• But it does lead inevitably to ignorance, for you can not understand what you deliberately chose to have no truck with.• Then the people who get penalised are the majority who want no truck with him.
Examples from the Corpus
truck• Why would a family minivan be called a truck?• Corporal Pocock found a rifle and hid by the wheel of a truck.• There was a truckparked in front of the quarry.• a garbagetruck• You can borrow my truck to go to the store.• I did not want to be sitting in my truck, waiting for a wolf to come by.• There was an odd-shaped room, not a lot bigger than the cab of the truck itself.• Branchesscraping the truck again, a grindingdownshift into first: and the truckjarring itself over dirt.• The truckpurred along the road, with the other truck following it.
4.keep on truckingspokenCONTINUE/NOT STOP used to encourage someone to continue what they are doing, especially in the 1970s 继续干,加油〔鼓励某人继续做某事,尤用于20世纪70年代〕