释义 |
hippie; hippy noun- a follower of jazz and the jazz scene who strives to be hip US, 1952
- Lot of these hippies here is still in high school. — Ross Russell, The Sound, p. 86, 1961
- For example, the hippies in his circle peppered all their choppy, laconic sentences with the word “like[.]” — Bernarde Wolfe, The Magic of Their Singing, p. 125, 1961
- “Lady bug, lady bug, fly away home,” he said, “your children are hippies, our house is on fire.” — Harlan Ellison, Lady Bug, Lady Bug, p. 84, 1961
- A few of the white men around Harlem, younger ones whom we called “hippies,” acted more Negro than Negroes. — Malcolm X and Alex Haley, The Autobiography of Malcolm X, p. 94, 1964
- The jazz musicians liked me. I was the only hippy around. — Lenny Bruce, How to Talk Dirty and Influence People, p. 93, 1965
- If it is true, like some of the hippies say, that Fred has been trying to be white all his life–and I’m not sure it is–that’s because of me. — Nat Hentoff, Jazz Country, p. 94, 1965
- The young broad with the hippy just in front of me turned her head back toward me. — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), Trick Baby, p. 86, 1969
- a person with 1960s counterculture values or accessories US
- ive untroubled young “hippies,” sprawled on floor mattresses and slouched in an armchair retrieved from a debris box, flipped cigarette ashes at a seashell in their Waller Street flat and pondered their next move. — San Francisco Examiner, p. 5, 5 September 1965: A New Paradise for Beatniks
- By 8:00 p.m. the crowd had swelled to about 200 children, hippies & just bystanders. — The San Francisco Oracle, 1966
- While the Fifth Estate and The Barb tend to focus on the hippie element, some of the new papers are looking beyond this substratum. — New York Times, p. 30, 1 August 1966
- But the hippies and teenieboppers on the Sunset Strip are not beatniks. — Los Angeles Herald Examiner, p. Second Front Page, 9 April 1967
- Hippies despise phoniness; they want to be open, honest, loving and free. — New York Times Magazine, p. 29, 14 May 1967
- The hippie has dropped out of a society he considers irredeemable; his attention is riveted on interior change and the expansion of personal consciousness. — Kenneth Keniston, American Scholar, p. 228, Spring 1968
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