| 释义 | 
		Definition of strait-laced in English: strait-laced(also straight-laced) adjective streɪtˈleɪstˌstreɪtˈleɪst Having or showing very strict moral attitudes. (道德方面)极严谨的;古板的  his strait-laced parents were horrified Example sentencesExamples -  And yet she's also, in a strange way, a highly moral person; it's just that she doesn't confuse morality with strait-laced cowardice and want of adventure.
 -  The institution represented apartheid-sanctioned entertainment with the local idiosyncrasy of dual-language, Christian parochialism and a straight-laced morality as part of the deal.
 -  In the sequel, a clash of cultures ensues when the straight-laced, conservative Byrnes family meets the liberal, relaxed Fockers.
 -  The straight-laced history of the capital became a focus for dreaming, a site for imagining a city which could better shape the lives of its inhabitants.
 -  Far from being strait-laced, women in the 1600s were as fashion conscious as today - even if it meant wearing highly revealing outfits.
 -  Audiences will love pretty much everyone in the movie, from the sexually daring parents to their straight-laced, teenaged son to the hunky plumber whose tool kit contains a couple of surprises.
 -  For two decades, the BBC's voice of youth enforced a moral code that your average Victorian aunt would have thought strait-laced.
 -  ‘What I had done was to signal a shift in our mindset to being more relaxed and open-minded, and less strait-laced and Victorian,’ he said.
 -  Straightforward and straight-laced, Haeg is not the mysterious type.
 -  It is strangely unclassifiable television - a caustically comic, surreptitiously sudsy thriller that has alienated a whole tranche of strait-laced Americans and so delighted many more.
 -  Due to her strict and pious upbringing Edith was a brisk, businesslike and rather straight-laced woman, serious with a no-nonsense attitude but still well liked by all who knew her.
 -  Once you turn the political contest into a strict test of personal character and behaviour, even the apparently most strait-laced leader is likely to come a cropper in the end.
 -  Shawn, the bridegroom, is played as a gormless buffoon; the real comedy of the earnest, strait-laced coward goes for nothing.
 -  She was very prim and straight-laced looking, and her entire personality tended to reinforce her appearance.
 -  It gets worse when Ian's straight-laced parents enter the fray.
 -  A strait-laced British Government official arrives to offer cash aid to dig 38 wells for the president's drought-stricken people.
 -  ‘You can be the most straight-laced person in the world but still find stuff like that funny,’ says Robson.
 -  To their more gung-ho colleagues in the financial sector, this strait-laced group is little more than a regulatory irritant, more interested in stopping them making money than helping them.
 -  ‘It was the only erotic program,’ Ananich said, recalling how strait-laced television was back then.
 -  Although the official site is comprehensive and impressive, it is straight-laced compared to the more flamboyant style of the fansite.
 
 Synonyms prim and proper, prim, proper, prudish, priggish, puritanical, moralistic, prissy, mimsy, niminy-piminy, shockable, Victorian, old-maidish, schoolmistressy, schoolmarmish, governessy conventional, conservative, old-fashioned, stuffy, staid, of the old school, narrow-minded informal goody-goody, starchy, square, fuddy-duddy, stick-in-the-mud rare Grundyish, Pecksniffian 
 UsageAs an adjective strait means ‘narrow or cramped’ and ‘strict or rigorous’: the idea behind strait-laced and straitjacket is of being tightly laced or confined. As strait is now old-fashioned and unfamiliar, however, people often interpret it as the more usual word straight. Straight-laced and straightjacket are now generally accepted in standard English, and the spelling straight-laced is more common than strait-laced in the Oxford English Corpus Rhymesbarefaced, baste, boldfaced, chaste, haste, lambaste, paste, po-faced, red-faced, self-faced, shamefaced, smooth-faced, taste, unplaced, untraced, waist, waste    Definition of strait-laced in US English: strait-laced(also straight-laced) adjectiveˌstrātˈlāstˌstreɪtˈleɪst Having or showing very strict moral attitudes. (道德方面)极严谨的;古板的  his strait-laced parents were horrified Example sentencesExamples -  A strait-laced British Government official arrives to offer cash aid to dig 38 wells for the president's drought-stricken people.
 -  Shawn, the bridegroom, is played as a gormless buffoon; the real comedy of the earnest, strait-laced coward goes for nothing.
 -  Far from being strait-laced, women in the 1600s were as fashion conscious as today - even if it meant wearing highly revealing outfits.
 -  In the sequel, a clash of cultures ensues when the straight-laced, conservative Byrnes family meets the liberal, relaxed Fockers.
 -  Audiences will love pretty much everyone in the movie, from the sexually daring parents to their straight-laced, teenaged son to the hunky plumber whose tool kit contains a couple of surprises.
 -  Due to her strict and pious upbringing Edith was a brisk, businesslike and rather straight-laced woman, serious with a no-nonsense attitude but still well liked by all who knew her.
 -  ‘You can be the most straight-laced person in the world but still find stuff like that funny,’ says Robson.
 -  ‘It was the only erotic program,’ Ananich said, recalling how strait-laced television was back then.
 -  To their more gung-ho colleagues in the financial sector, this strait-laced group is little more than a regulatory irritant, more interested in stopping them making money than helping them.
 -  Once you turn the political contest into a strict test of personal character and behaviour, even the apparently most strait-laced leader is likely to come a cropper in the end.
 -  Straightforward and straight-laced, Haeg is not the mysterious type.
 -  She was very prim and straight-laced looking, and her entire personality tended to reinforce her appearance.
 -  ‘What I had done was to signal a shift in our mindset to being more relaxed and open-minded, and less strait-laced and Victorian,’ he said.
 -  The institution represented apartheid-sanctioned entertainment with the local idiosyncrasy of dual-language, Christian parochialism and a straight-laced morality as part of the deal.
 -  It gets worse when Ian's straight-laced parents enter the fray.
 -  For two decades, the BBC's voice of youth enforced a moral code that your average Victorian aunt would have thought strait-laced.
 -  And yet she's also, in a strange way, a highly moral person; it's just that she doesn't confuse morality with strait-laced cowardice and want of adventure.
 -  The straight-laced history of the capital became a focus for dreaming, a site for imagining a city which could better shape the lives of its inhabitants.
 -  It is strangely unclassifiable television - a caustically comic, surreptitiously sudsy thriller that has alienated a whole tranche of strait-laced Americans and so delighted many more.
 -  Although the official site is comprehensive and impressive, it is straight-laced compared to the more flamboyant style of the fansite.
 
 Synonyms prim and proper, prim, proper, prudish, priggish, puritanical, moralistic, prissy, mimsy, niminy-piminy, shockable, victorian, old-maidish, schoolmistressy, schoolmarmish, governessy 
 UsageAs an adjective, strait means ‘narrow or cramped’ and ‘strict or rigorous’: the idea behind strait-laced and straitjacket is of being tightly laced or confined. As strait is now old-fashioned and unfamiliar, however, people often interpret it as the more usual word straight. Straight-laced and straightjacket are now generally accepted in standard English, and the spelling straight-laced is more common than strait-laced in the Oxford English Corpus     |