释义 |
gat noun- a gun, especially a pistol; in the Royal Air Force, a rifle US, 1897
- We’re just curious why a couple of hard guys like you two weren’t carrying your gats. — Irving Shulman, The Amboy Dukes, p. 164, 1947
- When he had been in town a few weeks he took Nick up there and showed him a gat. — Willard Motley, Knock on Any Door, p. 284, 1947
- As she came out, two men slipped from the front seat, and as one opened the door the other, with his hand inside his coat at his armpit where he carried his gat, looked up and down the block. — Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, New York Confidential, p. 17, 1948
- “Five hundred plus the gat?” I asked. He looked down at it rather absently. Then he dropped it into his pocket. — Raymond Chandler, The Long Goodbye, p. 21, 1953
- He excused himself and left Molly standing there with the gat in her hand, the first she had ever handled. — Elaine Shepard, The Doom Pussy, p. 28, 1967
- Pullin’ gats for fun[.] — C.R.E.A.M., 1994
- — Angela Devlin, Prison Patter, p. 55, 1996
- the anus SOUTH AFRICA, 1968
From Afrikaans (a hole).
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