释义 |
mag noun- a magazine, in any sense of the term UK, 1801
- For the rest of her career in Hollywood, while her gams are still straight and her figure otherwise, she’ll pose cheesecake for fang-mags[.] — Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, New York Confidential, p. 145, 1948
- He was going to publish a mag called The Rebel but it had come out only twice. — James Simon Kunen, The Strawberry Statement, p. 97, 1968
- Customers who flocked to the stores in 1967 allegedly asked for more explicit mags and loops. — Josh Alan Friedman, Tales of Times Square, p. 75, 1986
- MURTAUGH: What’s it take? RIGGS: Fifteen in the mag, one up the pipe. — Lethal Weapon, 1987
- a magnesium steel wheel on a race car US
- People even put fake mags over regular car wheels to make their cars look fancy. — Ed Radlauer, Drag Racing Pix Dix, p. 36, 1970
- a magneto, used on drag racing engines with no battery or generator US
- — Lyle K. Engel, The Complete Book of Fuel and Gas Dragsters, p. 153, 1968
- a brief conversation; a chat; a gossip AUSTRALIA, 1895
- Then we’ll prop here and have a mag and a few beers. — Robert G. Barrett, Davo’s Little Something, p. 257, 1992
- a Magnum pistol US, 1970
- Thirty-eights, I’ll take a three-fifty-seven mag if I have to. — George V. Higgins, The Friends of Eddie Doyle, p. 8, 1971
- He’s got a range, he’s teaching all these housewives come in how to fire three-fifty-sevens, forty-fives. Can you see it? Broad’s making cookies, she’s got this big fucking Mag stuck in her apron? — Elmore Leonard, Split Images, p. 22, 1981
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