pirate
pirate — noun
1. an armed robber who travels by ship across the sea, attacking other ships or coa
an armed robber who travels by ship across the sea, attacking other ships or coastal towns to steal money, cargo, or people.
In 1718, a pirate named Blackbeard captured a French slave ship near the Caribbean.
historical reference: a pirate named [Name]
Somali pirates seized the cargo ship and held the crew for ransom for three months.
collocation: pirates + seize/hold for ransom
The museum in Cornwall displays gold coins that pirates buried on a nearby island.
For Halloween, Marcus dressed as a pirate with an eye patch and a wooden sword.
Two hundred years ago, pirates from Tortuga attacked Spanish ships sailing back from South America.
文法句型
a pirate + verb
a band/crew of pirates
用法筆記
Often appears with adjectives that locate the pirate in time or place (Caribbean pirates, Somali pirates, modern pirates) and with verbs of violent taking (attack, board, seize, raid, plunder).
常見錯誤
2. someone who makes copies of films, music, software, or books without paying the
someone who makes copies of films, music, software, or books without paying the owner of the rights, and then shares or sells those copies.
Software pirates in the 1990s sold cheap copies of Microsoft Office on burned CDs.
compound: software/music/video pirate
Movie studios lose billions every year to pirates who upload films online before release.
collocation: pirates + upload/share/distribute
Police in Bangkok arrested two pirates who were printing fake copies of bestselling novels.
The new game has a code that stops pirates from running it on a second computer.
- bootlegger
informal; especially someone who sells unofficial copies of music or films
- counterfeiter
broader: makes fake versions of any product, not only media
文法句型
software/music/video pirate
用法筆記
Frequently used as a modifier (software pirate, music pirate) or with the medium as the object of the implied copying. Distinguish from sense 1: the sea-robber sense never appears in compounds about media.
常見錯誤
3. a station broadcasting radio or TV programmes without any government licence, of
a station broadcasting radio or TV programmes without any government licence, often from a hidden flat, a tall building, or a ship anchored offshore.
In the 1960s, a pirate broadcast pop music to British teenagers from a ship in the North Sea.
historical: 1960s UK pirate radio on ships
The police shut down a pirate that had been playing reggae from a flat in east London.
collocation: shut down / raid + a pirate (station)
Radio Caroline started as a pirate but later got a legal licence to broadcast.
Several pirates in Lagos play local hip-hop that mainstream stations refuse to air.
- unlicensed station
neutral, technical alternative
- underground station
emphasises hidden, anti-establishment character
- licensed station
official station with legal permission to broadcast
文法句型
pirate radio/TV station
用法筆記
Most often appears as a modifier in 'pirate radio' or 'pirate station'; the bare noun for a station is less common and usually clear from context (broadcasting, radio, frequency).
常見錯誤
pirate — verb
1. to make and share copies of a film, song, computer program, or book without perm
to make and share copies of a film, song, computer program, or book without permission from the people who own the rights to it.
Students in the dorm pirated the new album the night it came out.
transitive: pirate + [album/film/game]
The company sued a small website that was pirating its design software in Vietnam.
collocation: pirate + software/design tools
Many old anime films were pirated long before Japanese studios sold them abroad.
Sarah refused to pirate the textbook and saved up to buy a real copy.
Hackers pirated the game and posted free downloads two days before its release.
- license
obtain or grant legal permission to use the work
文法句型
pirate + [film/song/software/book]
often passive: be pirated
用法筆記
Object must be a creative or copyrightable work (film, song, album, game, software, book). Frequently used in the passive ('be pirated') when the focus is on the work rather than the copier.