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Patsies Meaning in English

word · lemma: patsy

ˈpætsiz
PAT-seeze
pˈætsɪz
PAT-siz

释义

'Patsies' are people who are easily tricked, blamed for something, or used by others, usually because they trust too easily or are not suspicious.

用法与细微差别

'Patsies' is informal and mildly negative. Often used to describe someone unfairly blamed or someone too naive to recognize a scam. Common collocation: 'make someone a patsy' (frame them). Not literal; avoid using for serious accusations.

例句

Some children are easy patsies for playground bullies.

basic

They picked two patsies to blame for the mistake.

basic

Scammers look for patsies who will trust them easily.

basic

The manager set up two employees as patsies so he wouldn’t get in trouble.

natural

Don’t be patsies—always read the contract before you sign anything.

natural

After the robbery, the real thieves made sure the police saw the two patsies near the scene.

natural