loophole

loophole [ˈlu:phəʊl]  [ˈlu:phoʊl] 

loophole的意思

第三人称复数:loopholes

loophole 基本解释

名词漏洞; 枪眼; 观察孔

loophole 网络解释

1. 换气孔,小窗,枪眼:succor 援助 | loophole 换气孔,小窗,枪眼 | blazon 以家徽装饰,宣布

2. 大爆劫:Looker, The 催眼 1982 | Loophole 大爆劫 1981 | Loose Screws Miss正斗 1986

3. 枪眼:loophole certificates 漏洞融通证明书 | loophole 枪眼 | loopworm 尺蠖

loophole 词典解释

1. (法律上的)漏洞,空子
    A loophole in the law is a small mistake which allows people to do something that would otherwise be illegal.

    e.g. It is estimated that 60,000 shops open every Sunday and trade by exploiting some loophole in the law to avoid prosecution.
           据估计,每逢周日开门营业的店铺有6万家,通过钻法律漏洞躲避检控。

loophole 单语例句

1. A loophole in the management or technology will only cause more trouble to more people.

2. That would fix another loophole that has allowed Internet users to evade child pornography laws by not downloading or saving the images.

3. The Columbine killers shot Daniel with guns purchased through that very loophole.

4. These funds are using the " calendar swaps " loophole in American commodity market regulation.

5. The lack of constitutional or legal guarantee for " just compensation " is a loophole in the country's real property expropriation system.

6. The concept of office terms is revolutionary because it plugs a conspicuous loophole in China's political architecture.

7. Yet the absence of hate crimes in the existing criminal code is a lamentable loophole that should be plugged in no time.

8. I am doubtful as to whether the loophole is so big that its side effects would outweigh the advantages brought by the exemption.

9. Hope thinks a loophole exists in the 1967 UN Outer Space Treaty, which forbids governments from owning extraterrestrial property but fails to mention corporations or individuals.

10. \u0039\u0031\u0031\u67E5\u8BE2\u00B7\u82F1\u8BED\u5355\u8BCD

10. Others have hailed him as a kind of hero for exposing a glaring airport security loophole.

loophole 英英释义

loophole是什么意思

noun

1. a small hole in a fortified wall
    for observation or discharging weapons

2. loophole

2. an ambiguity (especially one in the text of a law or contract) that makes it possible to evade a difficulty or obligation