0 a person who illegally follows and watches someone, especially a woman, over a period of time:
1 someone who follows a person, usually intending to hurt that person:
The idea of a stalker on the loose is quite frightening.
Classifying stalkers is a necessary step in understanding motivation, recognizing indicators of risk and developing treatment strategies.
While helpful to professionals dealing with victims, such reading may be overwhelming, and sometimes alarming, to victims who have experienced lesser behaviours from their stalkers.
They would need gillies, wardens, stalkers, guides, petrol services, garages, shopping centres and so on.
As a recent successful prosecution has shown, more serious acts by stalkers, such as causing grievous bodily harm, are caught by the criminal law.
Here the deer have found refuge, as in a sanctuary, because there are no stalkers.
This, again, is clearly necessary, because there will often be only a single stalker, gamekeeper or shepherd at the scene of the offence.
The suggestion that we should make stalkers into policemen means that we should expect them to carry out the duties of the police.
It is essential that the investigative powers of the police should be available to identify the stalker and bring him to justice.
中文繁体
跟蹤者, (尤指)跟蹤騷擾女性者…
More中文简体
跟踪者, (尤指)跟踪骚扰女性者…
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acosador, -ora, asediador…
MorePortuguês
perseguidor, -ora…
MoreTürk dili
takip eden kimse, gizlice izleyen kimse…
MoreFrançais
chasseur à l’affût…
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stopař…
MoreDansk
fanatisk tilhænger…
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