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词组 hit
释义 hit
noun
  1. a single inhalation of marijuana, hashish, crack cocaine, or any drug’s smoke US, 1952
    • If somebody hands you a joint and you don’t take a hit off of it, it’s like sticking out your hand and not having someone shake it. — Leonard Wolfe (Editor), Voices from the Love Generation, p. 241, 1968
    • Man, I am so fucking messed up and ripped! I got off on the first hit, man!? — John Rechy, The Fourth Angel, p. 32, 1972
    • You’re gonna have to put some gum around of the base of that if you want to get a good hit, man. — Dazed and Confused, 1993
    • A hit off it and you was messed up for the rest of the night[.] — The Source, p. 42, April 1994
    • Barbie shrugged, took a big hit of the joint and handed it to Griffin[.] — Francesca Lia Block, I Was a Teenage Fairy, p. 94, 1998
    • I want to have sex and do a hit right as we’re coming. — Traffic, 2000
  2. a dose of a drug US, 1952
    • The only concern she had at the moment was whether or not she could get a hit. — Donald Goines, Dopefiend, p. 9, 1971
    • Musicians getting a quick hit while [the police] are out of the way — A. Stuart, The Bikers, 1972
    • They used to deal acid, while on acid. Big deals, gram deals, thousands of hits. — Stephen Gaskin, Amazing Dope Tales, p. 5, 1980
    • When Masterrap missed an appointment with his girlfriend he came back to the apartment and said he wanted a “hit” because the girl was “messing him around.” — Terry Williams, The Cocaine Kids, p. 48, 1989
    • Lorna finally took two hits and told me I looked like an Orange Elephant. — Jennifer Blowdryer, White Trash Debutante, p. 37, 1997
    • Single hits or small clusters of them are sold on the retail level to individual trippers. — Cam Cloud, The Little Book of Acid, p. 34, 1999
  3. an intravenous injection of a drug, usually heroin UK
    • — Angela Devlin, Prison Patter, p. 62, 1996
    • I’d just got back from London with an ounce of gear [heroin] in my pocket, so I was dying for a hit. — Lanre Fehintola, Charlie Says..., p. 20, 2000
  4. a meeting with a drug dealer and a drug user US
    • American Speech, p. 26, February 1952: “Teen-age hophead jargon”
  5. in the eastern US in the early 1990s, prescription medication with codeine US
    • — Peter Johnson, Dictionary of Street Alcohol and Drug Terms, p. 93, 1993
    • JAY: I got hits, hash, weed, and later on I’ll have ‘shrooms. We take cash or stolen MasterCard and Visa. — Clerks, 1994
  6. a marijuana cigarette UK, 2001
    • — Mike Haskins, Drugs, p. 287, 2003
  7. a tablet of MDMA, the recreational drug best known as ecstasy UK
    • I sit in my cell in New Hampshire State Prison, USA, serving an eight-20-year sentence for conspiracy to possess ecstasy (7,000 hits). Conspiracy! — Mixmag, p. 7, June 2003
  8. a deliberate inhalation of solvent fumes, such as glue sniffing UK
    • [They] take deep, practised hits from a white, plastic supermarket bag[.] — Time Out, 8 January 1982
  9. a blast of euphoria, joy, excitement US
    Figurative use of a drug term.
    • Another is elation, the hit that comes when you’ve brought it off, an argument or whatever. — The Last Supplement to the Whole Earth Catalog, p. 23, March 1971
  10. the electronic registration of a visit to a website US
    • As proof, he mentioned the experience on Valentine’s Day, when his firm’s “build a car” application was noted as the “Cool Site of the Day” and received more than 10,000 hits on its WebSite server. — Computerworld, p. 53, 29 May 1995
    • Hits are a common measure of the popularity of a Web site, though more sophisticated measures are evolving. — Wired Style, 1996
  11. a planned murder US, 1950
    • They’re having a gang war and he got assigned by the Brooklyn mob to make the hit. — Chester Himes, The Real Cool Killers, p. 47, 1959
    • So far the cops can’t find anybody who heard a damn thing and whoever pulled off the hits must be either an expert at disguise or different guys altogether. — Mickey Spillane, Last Cop Out, p. 11, 1972
    • Hits never bothered him. It was business. — Goodfellas, 1990
    • There were no drugs on that boat. It was a hit. — The Usual Suspects, 1995
    • Mrs. Ayala, is it true your husband has ordered a hit on Eduardo Ruiz? — Traffic, 2000
  12. an arrest US
    • — Kenn “Naz” Young, Naz’s Underground Dictionary, p. 36, 1973
  13. a winning bet in an illegal lottery UK, 1818
    • With the odds at six hundred to one, a penny hit won $6, a dollar won $600, and so on. — Malcolm X and Alex Haley, The Autobiography of Malcolm X, p. 84, 1964
    • Once he got the club over Pepper’s head, he would force her to sneak in phony “hit” slips against the policy wheel. — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), Pimp, p. 69, 1969
    • Them’s my last two dollars, Francie, so you bring me back a hit tonight, you hear? — Louise Meriwether, Daddy Was a Number Runner, p. 14, 1970
    • [H]is small bankroll couldn’t stand a hit for over five hundred dollars. — Donald Goines, El Dorado Red, p. 26, 1974
    • [H]e’d stake people who needed money, helped a whole lot of people and he always paid his hits, no hedging. — Edwin Torres, Carlito’s Way, pp. 28–29, 1975
  14. in blackjack, a card that a player requests from the dealer to add to his hand US
    • — Lee Solkey, Dummy Up and Deal, p. 114, 1980
  15. in snowboarding, a snow jump CANADA
    • — Mike Fabbro, Snowboarding, p. 94, 1996: “Glossary”
  16. a stylized signature spray-painted in public places US
    • Early Writers–Taki 183, Frank 207, and Julio 204–did not seem to care much what their “hits” (early term for tags) looked like as long as they got them up and people could read them. — Craig Castleman, Getting Up, p. 53, 1982
▶ on hit
excellent US
  • — Vann Wesson, Generation X Field Guide and Lexicon, p. 124, 1997
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