释义 |
libber noun a feminist US, 1972 From “Woman’s Liberation” as the name for the feminist movement of the late 1960s.- It didn’t want me want to burn my bra–but it did send me back to those early women’s libbers who said it all so much better: Ibsen and Shaw. — New York Times, 10 May 1970
- — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, October 1972
- “Probably a libber,” said Rose Rules. — Joseph Wambaugh, The Choirboys, p. 319, 1975
- “I’ll get you later,” he hissed menacingly, marking them as dykes or libbers from the way they screamed. — Alix Shulman, On the Stroll, p. 127, 1981
- If the men saw her as “The Libber,” she adds, she would lose what effectiveness she has. — The Washington Post, p. C1, 9 October 1984
- They said these complaints were ridiculous. He was a fine person and we were a bunch of women’s libbers. — Seattle Times, p. A1, 15 December 2003
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