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词组 do
释义 do
verb
  1. to kill UK, 1790
    • Kenny walked all over that racketland looking for a gun he could buy to shoot the elbows and kneecaps off of the berk who paid to have Matt done. — Emmett Grogan, Ringolevio, p. 203, 1972
    • You fucking chancer. You fucking poxy chancer. You nearly fucking done the lot of us, didn’t you? — Ted Lewis, Jack Carter’s Law, p. 182, 1974
    • If I knew anyone that took them [drugs], I’d fucking do ’em. — Paul E. Willis, Profane Culture, p. 14, 1978
    • Let’s go all the way, let’s go for it! Let’s do the whole fucking village. — Platoon, 1986
    • That was something he picked up at the movies, that blowing away. Armand tried to think how his brothers used to say it. They would say they were going to do a guy. — Elmore Leonard, Killshot, p. 74, 1989
    • You never say nuthin bot doin one! You... you never even say nuthin bout hittin one! — Jess Mowry, Way Past Cool, p. 36, 1992
  2. to charge with, or prosecute for, or convict of a crime UK, 1784
    • — Paul Tempest, Lag’s Lexicon, 1950
    • “Done for drunk”, “Done for speed”. — Peter Laurie, Scotland Yard, p. 322, 1970
    • The DPP considered prosecuting the Duke of Edinburgh after a traffic accident in the mid-1960s, and other royals have been done for speeding. — New Society, 22 July 1982
    • He was done for speeding in a built-up area. — Beale, 1984
  3. to use up your money, especially to squander AUSTRALIA, 1889
    • You’ll finish up doing your dough that way. — John Wynnum, Tar Dust, p. 20, 1962
    • I mean it’s nothing for him to go to the races, do a bundle, and come home laughing and joking like nothing’s happened. — Paul Vautin, Turn It Up!, p. 134, 1995
    • [T]hey will fight tooth and nail to prevent any compensation being paid to those who do their money in that circumstance[.] — Kelvin Thomson, Hansard (Commonwealth of Australia), 12 March 1998
  4. to assault, to beat up UK, 1796
    • — Angela Devlin, Prison Patter, p. 46, 1996
  5. to injure (a part of the body) AUSTRALIA
    • I’m sorry, mate, but I’ll have to go off. I’ve done it completely. — Richie Benaud, Spin me a Spinner, p. 120, 1963
    • Chances are you’ll do your back, rip your boardies or fall flat off. — Tracks, p. 126, October 1992
    • — Phillip Gwynne, Deadly Unna?, p. 64, 1998
  6. to rob UK, 1774
    • How many banks was it you’ve done in your life, about fifty? — Elmore Leonard, Bandits, p. 97, 1987
    • “We’re not doing a house,” says Becca. “There’s a lot of rich bastards there though,” says Kelly. — Cath Staincliffe, Trainers, p. 59, 1999
  7. to swindle, to deceive, to trick UK, 1641
  8. to have sex with UK, 1650
    • I tried some sex banter with him but Axel was looking fierce. “I’d like to do some of them,” he whispered, “I’d like to do some of them.” — Clancy Sigal, Going Away, p. 258, 1961
    • And men take her to loveless beds when they have nothing else and no one better to do — Sue Rhodes, And when she was bad she was popular, p. 104, 1968
    • DALLAS: I’ll pay ya twenty if you go back there and do mah husband. BUTT-HEAD: Uh, you want us to do a guy? Huh huh. No way. BEAVIS: Umm, I don’t know Butt-head. That is a lot of money. Maybe if we close our eyes and pretend he’s a chick. — Mike Judge and Joe Stillman, Beavis and Butt-Head Do America, p. 29, 1997
    • “I don’t do divorced men.” Karen gave me a tense smile and lowered her voice to a confidential whisper. “You know, Lisa, I probably shouldn’t say this, but the word do sometimes has sexual connotations.” — Rita Ciresi, Pink Slip, p. 29, 1999
    • Gwenno might even go to bed with you. Let yew fuckin do her, like. — Niall Griffiths, Sheepshagger, p. 142, 2001
  9. to perform oral sex upon someone US
    • — Donald Webster Cory and John P. LeRoy, The Homosexual and His Society, p. 263, 1963: “A lexicon of homosexual slang”
  10. to consume, especially an alcoholic drink UK, 1857
    • Could you do a cold stubbie? — Sam Weller, Old Bastards I Have Met, p. 22, 1979
  11. to use drugs US, 1967
    • Within three days, a homeless kid who finds himself or herself in Kings Cross [Sydney] will be sexually assaulted; within a week the kid will be doing drugs, and by 21 the kid will be dead. — The Catholic Weekly, 23 February 2003
  12. when combined with a name (of a very recognisable person or group) that is used as a generic noun, to behave in the manner of that person or group of people UK, 1934
    • So you won’t be doing a Madonna on us? — Details Magazine, July 1992
    • I worry that the PM [Tony Blair] spends too much time listening to his beloved entrepreneurial friends advising him to “do a Thatcher” at this stage of his government. — The Observer, 24 March 2002
  13. to visit as a tourist or pleasure-seeker UK, 1858
    • Our number 20 did Paris better than a tourist bus. — The Guardian, 27 November 1999
  14. to suffice, to answer its purpose US, 1846
    • It will do for now. — The Guardian, 13 September 2000
▶ do cards
to steal or forge credit cards UK
  • — Angela Devlin, Prison Patter, p. 46, 1996
▶ do it
  1. to have sex IRELAND, 1923
    • Why, oh, Christ, why had he ever done it with that bitch? — James T. Farrell, Tournament Star, p. 68, 1946
    • But how do you get the clap? By doing it, and anybody who does that dirty thing obviously deserves to get the clap. — Lenny Bruce, How to Talk Dirty and Influence People, p. 54, 1965
    • [D]oing it everyway we could think of any-old place we happened to be, in fact, we did it in so many places that Denver was covered with our pecker-tracks. — Neal Cassady, The First Third, p. 153, 1971
    • Louisianans do it Bayoutifully — Maledicta, pp. 174–179, Winter 1980
    • I couldn’t have been a day older than six when Loretta and I started doin’ it. — Odie Hawkins, Black Casanova, p. 9, 1984
    • Well, actually, my one girlfriend who had kids, Alice, and she would complain about how she and Gary never did it any more. — When Harry Met Sally, 1989
    • Then you get to do it with a condom. — Sleepless in Seattle, 1993
  2. to defecate; to urinate UK, 1922
    Euphemistic.
    • When one of us had to urinate, he just did it in his pants, knowing that the following day the heat from the sun would dry them out. — Henry Steele Commager The Story of World War II, p. 109, 1945
▶ do like a dinner
to overcome someone completely in a fight or competition; to vanquish AUSTRALIA, 1847
Punning on the phrase “dinner’s done” (dinner is ready).
  • [I]t was election day and Labor was going to get done like a dinner[.] — Helen Garner, Monkey Grip, p. 184, 1977
▶ do me
to live independently, to take care of yourself US
  • “I had to do me,” said Donnie, explaining in street slang that he had to survive. — Philadelphia Daily News, p. Local 3, 27 December 2006
▶ do the dirty on
to trick or otherwise treat unfairly UK, 1914
  • Do not even have a mini thingio about doing the dirty on that cunt. — Kevin Sampson, Clubland, p. 167, 2002
▶ do the do
to have sex US
  • — Ken “Naz” Young, Naz’s Dictionary of Teen Slang, p. 33, 1993
▶ do the Harold Holt; do the Harold
to decamp AUSTRALIA
From rhyming slang for “bolt”. Harold Holt (1908–67) was an Australian prime minister whose office was cut short when he went ocean swimming one afternoon and presumably drowned–his body was never recovered.
  • Then we could do the Harold Holt–“Bolt” he decoded for me–up to Joh country. — Kathy Lette, Girls’ Night Out, p. 169, 1987
▶ do the thing
to have sex US
  • Current Slang, p. 5, Summer 1968
▶ do your bit
to do your share and so contribute to the greater good, especially in times of trial or conflict UK, 1902
  • You could argue that I did my bit and others didn’t. — The Guardian, 1 February 2003
▶ do your do
to prepare your hairdo US
  • Adult Video News, p. 44, August 1995
▶ do yourself in
to commit suicide UK
A personalised variation of DO IN
  • He’d probably, quite seriously, do himself in. There’d be nothing else to live for. — Kevin Sampson, Powder, p. 33, 1999
  • ▶ you’ll do me/us
    you are entirely suitable for a task; we are more than happy to be supporting you AUSTRALIA, 1952
    Used as a cry of encouragement and support.
    • Rock it in, Harry! You’ll do us. — John Morrison, Stories of the Waterfront, p. 138, 1955
    • He’ll do me, old Nesbitt. — J.E. MacDonnell, Don’t Gimme the Ships, p. 21, 1960
    • You’ll do me for a mate in a brawl, Ivor. — Wal Watkins, Andamooka, p. 167, 1971
    • “Good on yer padre.” “You’re OK, mate.” “You’ll do us, padre.” — William Nagel, The Odd Angry Shot, p. 50, 1975
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    更新时间:2025/5/6 15:56:55