creep

creep — noun

1. a person who acts overly friendly and helpful toward someone in a position of po

1.名詞C1
釋義

a person who acts overly friendly and helpful toward someone in a position of power or authority, but whose behaviour is insincere and aimed at winning personal favour

例句

The new manager quickly saw that Nikos was a creep who agreed with everything the boss said.

be + a + creep = disapproving label for a person

Soraya disliked working with creeps who never offered their own opinions.

同義詞
  • sycophant

    more formal; used in writing rather than everyday speech

  • bootlicker

    very informal and rude; stronger disapproval

  • toady

    dated but still used in British English; describes someone who flatters for advantage

文法句型

be a creep

用法筆記

Strongly negative word. Use it to criticise someone whose friendliness you believe is fake and self-serving, not for honest admiration or respect.

常見錯誤

He is a real creep for helping his elderly neighbour.
He is a real creep for always laughing at the boss's bad jokes.
💡'Creep' implies insincere flattery for personal gain, not genuine kindness.

2. someone whose odd or offensive behaviour makes other people feel uneasy, nervous

2.名詞B2
釋義

someone whose odd or offensive behaviour makes other people feel uneasy, nervous, or threatened — the word is most often aimed at men

例句

That creep at the bar kept staring at Tamar even after she asked him to stop.

that creep = referring to an unspecified disliked person

Darius told his sister to stay away from the creep who had been following her home.

同義詞
  • weirdo

    focuses on strangeness rather than threat; slightly less severe

  • jerk

    broader; describes rude or obnoxious behaviour without the creepy/threatening tone

文法句型

be a creep

that creep

用法筆記

Strong insult in most contexts — equates the person's character with unpleasantness or threat. Not used in polite or professional descriptions of people.

常見錯誤

My little brother is being a creep today.' (playful context)
My little brother is being annoying today.
💡'Creep' is a strong negative label, not a light teasing word for children.

3. a slow process by which something keeps growing or spreading bit by bit, especia

3.名詞C1
釋義

a slow process by which something keeps growing or spreading bit by bit, especially when that change was not foreseen and is not welcome

例句

The creep of rising prices has made everyday life harder for many families in Taipei.

the creep of + noun phrase = gradual unwanted process

Hui worried about the slow creep of coastal erosion along the beach near her village.

同義詞

文法句型

the creep of [something]

用法筆記

Common in formal and journalistic writing. Often paired with a noun that names something negative: the creep of inflation, the creep of government regulation, the creep of surveillance.

常見錯誤

The creep of the garden flowers is beautiful.
The creep of weeds into the garden is hard to stop.
💡This sense implies something unwanted or negative; not used for positive growth.

4. a strong uncomfortable feeling of fear or nervousness, as if something unpleasan

4.名詞B2
釋義

a strong uncomfortable feeling of fear or nervousness, as if something unpleasant is touching your skin or watching you from the dark

例句

The old abandoned hospital gave Emma the creeps, especially the dark basement stairs.

give [someone] the creeps = idiomatic phrase for causing unease

Putri felt a creep of fear run down her spine when the lights flickered and died.

同義詞

文法句型

give someone the creeps

the creeps

用法筆記

The phrase 'give someone the creeps' is far more common than using 'creep' alone for this meaning. Always use 'the' before 'creeps'.

常見錯誤

The movie gave me a creep.
The movie gave me the creeps.
💡This meaning is almost always expressed with the fixed phrase 'the creeps', not the singular form.

5. the act of moving slowly with your body low against the floor or ground, using y

5.名詞B1
釋義

the act of moving slowly with your body low against the floor or ground, using your knees and hands for support or dragging yourself along

例句

The baby took her first creep across the living-room rug while her parents cheered.

first creep = first crawling movement as a milestone

Ramón timed how long the tortoise took for each slow creep across the garden path.

同義詞
  • crawl

    the usual word for babies and animals moving on hands and knees

  • crawl

    also used as a noun: 'a slow crawl'

文法句型

a slow creep

a creep across/toward [something]

用法筆記

Less common than the verb 'crawl' for describing babies' movement. As a noun, 'creep' emphasises slowness and care rather than ordinary crawling.

creep — verb