0 to secretly look at something for a short time, usually through a hole:
1 to appear slowly and not be completely seen:
3 a statement, answer, or complaint:
One more peep out of you and there'll be no television tomorrow.
There hasn't been a peep out of (= any form of communication from) my sister for a couple of weeks.
4 to not hear someone speak or make a sound, especially when this is surprising:
5 the weak high noise made by young birds
Take/Have a peep at what it says in this letter.
She’s too scared to make a peep.
She sat there, peeping at us, seemingly pleased with herself and with our response.
She peeped through a hole in a tent and saw a man in the rear.
From within that which is one's own (nijaswa), a sort of otherness (paraswa) peeps out in every layer.
Peeping is preferable to keeping because more than a peep is not worth keeping.
All that television can offer instead is a dreary keyhole peep at the teenage clan in action.
After tillering, two further irrigations were scheduled for awn peep and water grain, but they did not happen at all sites.
Brief exposures or looks through monocular "peep-holes" do not represent true perception in his view.
In bonobos, peep sequences are among the most important vocalizations, and croaks, muffled barks, and panting laughs are used mainly by young individuals.
中文繁体
看, (通常指透過小孔)窺視,偷看, 出現…
More中文简体
看, (通常指通过小孔)窥视,偷看, 出现…
MoreEspañol
mirar furtivamente, echar una ojeada, mirada furtiva…
MorePortuguês
dar uma olhada furtiva, espreitar, olhadela…
More日本語
のぞき見する, (隠れて)チラッと見る, のぞき見…
MoreFrançais
jeter un coup d’œil, coup [masculine] d’œil, regarder qqch à la dérobée…
MoreCatalan
llambregar, mirar d’esquitllada, ullada…
Moreالعربية
يَخْتَلِس النَّظَر إلى, نَظْرة سَريعة…
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