释义 |
Joe College noun a stereotypical male college student US, 1932- Why, Phil, you’re all togged out like Joe College. — James T. Farrell, Saturday Night, p. 20, 1947
- Then we’d throw big wine parties and have girls and end up jumping out of windows and playing Joe College pranks up and down town. — Jack Kerouac, The Dharma Bums, p. 22, 1958
- He had been in turn a Joe College hero lionized on the college prom circuit, a missionary of the new jazz in the early days of Swing, and now a war hero of sorts. — Ross Russell, The Sound, p. 56, 1961
- He is a firm homosexual but is a handsome young man, who to the average citizen would appear to be a charming Joe College. — The Market Street Proposition (KFRC radio, San Francisco), 8 November 1965
- Joe College has finally arrived. — Mart Crowley, The Boys in the Band, p. 41, 1968
- More important, he was the real enemy, we thought, since he was our competition for the hearts and minds of Joe and Susie College, who were naively jumping on his clean-cut haywagon. — Raymond Mungo, Famous Long Ago, p. 80, 1970
- “Why dontcha start pickin up ashtrays?” the Manager suggested to her, ringing up drinks for the latecoming Joe Colleges. — Seth Morgan, Homeboy, p. 136, 1990
- “I was expecting an older man, but he looked like Joe College,” she recalled. — Kathryn Leigh Scott, The Bunny Years, p. 52, 1998
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