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Rat   /ræt/   Listen
Rat

noun
1.
Any of various long-tailed rodents similar to but larger than a mouse.
2.
Someone who works (or provides workers) during a strike.  Synonyms: blackleg, scab, strikebreaker.
3.
A person who is deemed to be despicable or contemptible.  Synonyms: bum, crumb, dirty dog, git, lowlife, puke, rotter, scum bag, skunk, so-and-so, stinker, stinkpot.  "Kill the rat" , "Throw the bum out" , "You cowardly little pukes!" , "The British call a contemptible person a 'git'"
4.
One who reveals confidential information in return for money.  Synonyms: betrayer, blabber, informer, squealer.
5.
A pad (usually made of hair) worn as part of a woman's coiffure.
verb
(past & past part. ratted; pres. part. ratting)
1.
Desert one's party or group of friends, for example, for one's personal advantage.
2.
Employ scabs or strike breakers in.
3.
Take the place of work of someone on strike.  Synonyms: blackleg, fink, scab.
4.
Give (hair) the appearance of being fuller by using a rat.
5.
Catch rats, especially with dogs.
6.
Give away information about somebody.  Synonyms: betray, denounce, give away, grass, shit, shop, snitch, stag, tell on.



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"Rat" Quotes from Famous Books



... his fine clothes, for he was richly dressed as the fashion of the time went, with his high colouring, broad shoulders, and face full of health and vigour. Mentally I compared him with myself, as I was after my fever and loss of blood, a poor, white-faced rat of a lad, with stubbly brown hair on my head and only a little down on my chin, with arms like sticks, and a dirty blanket for raiment. How could I compare with him in any way? What chance had I against this opulent bully who hated me and all my race, and in whose hands, even if I were ...
— Marie - An Episode in The Life of the late Allan Quatermain • H. Rider Haggard

... keep the Marquis in Calais till tomorrow midday. I have turned over twenty schemes in my head. We cannot denounce him as a dynamiter; that is agreed. We cannot get him detained on some trivial charge, for we should have to appear; he knows us, and he would smell a rat. We cannot pretend to keep him on anarchist business; he might swallow much in that way, but not the notion of stopping in Calais while the Czar went safely through Paris. We might try to kidnap him, and lock him up ourselves; but he is a well-known man here. He has ...
— The Man Who Was Thursday - A Nightmare • G. K. Chesterton

... allowed half an hour's daily promenade in the corridor (galetas) outside his cell—a dingy, rat-infested place, into which old rubbish was apt to drift. One day Casanova noticed a piece of black marble on the floor—polished, an inch thick and six inches long. He picked it up stealthily, and without any definite intention, managed to hide it ...
— The True Story Book • Andrew Lang

... the bosom of a buxom flower-girl who, laughing boisterously, wound a pair of sturdy red arms round me. Then he stepped forward, and seizing Phineas by the scruff of the neck shook him as a dog shakes a rat. To what more violence he would have proceeded I do not know; for suddenly from above us, out of a window of the Cock and Pie, came a voice which sent a stir through ...
— Simon Dale • Anthony Hope

... trained to hunt, and never killed a rat, And isn't much on tricks or looks or birth—well, what of that? That might be said of lots of folks whom men call great and wise, As well as of that yellow dog ...
— The Dog's Book of Verse • Various


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