释义 |
mainline verb to inject drugs, especially heroin, into a main vein US, 1938- I want it mainline for one blast. — George Mandel, Flee the Angry Strangers, p. 378–379, 1952
- Main-lining her. Capping her straight. — John D. McDonald, The Neon Jungle, p. 46, 1953
- But when you main-line, you’re gone, man, clear out. — Ross Russell, The Sound, p. 205, 1961
- Of course all the students smoke pot and experiment with LSD but only a few main-line[.] — Gore Vidal, Myra Breckinridge, p. 39, 1968
- “Don’t mainline him, for Chrissake,” he, too, shouting at the top of his voice, “we’ll have a fucking stiff on our hands.” — Terry Southern, Blue Movie, p. 190, 1970
- Slumberously evil eyes stare into the camera with an odd malevolence, perhaps due to the powerful “speed ball” (heroin and cocaine in combination) I had mainlined a half hour before I sat for the photographer. — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), The Naked Soul of Iceberg Slim, p. 239, 1971
- It was also believed that dependency [on heroin] could be avoided by careful and occasional “skin popping” rather than mainlining. — Paul E. Wills, Profane Culture, p. 151, 1978
- I ain’t been mainlining or anything like that, no skin popping, just snorting[.] — Joel Rose, Kill Kill Faster Faster, pp. 185–186, 1997
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