释义 |
fat adjective- good US
- — Newsweek, p. 28, 8 October 1951
- — Collin Baker et al., College Undergraduate Slang Study Conducted at Brown University, p. 115, 1968
- — Hy Lit, Hy Lit’s Unbelievable Dictionary of Hip Words for Groovy People, p. 14, 1968
- wealthy UK, 1699
- RACINE: How’d he get so fat? MATTY: The stock market, investments, real estate. — Body Heat, 1980
- (used of a fuel mixture) too rich US, 2001
Biker (motorcycle) usage. - (used of a part in a dramatic production) demanding, challenging, rewarding US
- — Sherman Louis Sergel, The Language of Show Biz, p. 85, 1973
- when said of a military unit, over-staffed US Vietnam war usage.
- Theirs was a “fat” battalion, meaning a unit at over its authorized strength. — Philip Caputo, A Rumor of War, p. 206, 1977
- (ironically) slim; little AUSTRALIA, 1938
Especially in the phrases “fat chance” and “fat hopes”. - Well, he’s got fat hopes of doing that. — Sue Rhodes, Now you’ll think I’m awful, p. 21, 1967
- Fat fucking chance of relaxing with fucking secret police driving the cabs. — Robert English, Toxic Kisses, p. 38, 1979
- “Fat chance,” sneered Joe. — Lance Peters, The Dirty Half-Mile, p. 68, 1979
- out of fashion, old-fashioned UK
- “Hippies are fat” said one 16-year old I spoke to last week. — New Society, 7 February 1980
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