foe
/fəʊ/ (bre, ipa) · [fˈo] /fəʊ/ (ame, ipa) · [fˈo] /ˈfō/ (ame, mw)
foe — noun
- foesingular
- foesplural
1. a person, group, or side that wants to harm you, defeat you, or stop what you ar
a person, group, or side that wants to harm you, defeat you, or stop what you are trying to do.
After the lawsuit, Priya saw her former business partner as a foe.
see someone as a foe
In the smoke, Kwame could not tell friend from foe.
fixed phrase: tell friend from foe
For many villagers, the invading army remained a dangerous foe.
Years later, the two generals still spoke of each other as old foes.
During the debate, Hui treated every critic as a personal foe.
文法句型
a foe
be a foe of [person/group]
tell friend from foe
用法筆記
More formal and literary than 'enemy', and especially common in history writing, fantasy, and dramatic speech. It also appears in the fixed phrase 'friend or foe' when asking whether someone is safe or dangerous.