释义 |
make out verb- to kiss with passion and in a sustained fashion US, 1949
- “Making out” was nothing more than what used to be called necking or petting. This activity, as older readers will recall, covered a good deal of territory, but always stopped short of fulfillment. — Max Shulman, Rally Round the Flag, Boys!, p. 171, 1957
- “He has finesse. No sweaty hands, no making out in drive-in movies.” “Making out?” “My God, Larry, where’ve you been living. I guess you still call it necking.” — Frederick Kohner, Gidget, p. 71, 1957
- Then we broke up, she telling me I didn’t know enough about “making out” to keep her from wanting to date other boys[.] — Phyllis and Eberhard Kronhausen, Sex Histories of American College Men, p. 116, 1960
- “Make,” “Make out,” “Make time” [.] — American Speech, pp. 229–230, October 1961
- I’m sick of these creeps who want to make out all the time. — Ann Landers, Ann Landers Talks to Teen-Agers About Sex, p. 117, 1963
- [W]hen they used certain phrases like “making out,” they were talking about something else. — Robert Gover, Poorboy at the Party, pp. 5–6, 1966
- [Y]ou didn’t act like it was an invitation to make out for the night. — S.E. Hinton, The Outsiders, p. 26, 1967
- Who do you make-out to? Sinatra or Mathis? — Diner, 1982
- And now he was downstairs making out with one of the prettiest girls Griffin had ever seen. — Francesca Lia Block, I Was a Teenage Fairy, p. 97, 1998
- to pretend UK, 1659
- So one day they had a moody ruck and made out that they had a punch up[.] — Frank Norman, Bang To Rights, p. 60, 1958
- I can see him laughing and make out I haven’t seen him. — Ian Hebditch, Weekend, The Sharper Word, p. 134, 1969
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