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词组 bug
释义 bug
verb
  1. to bother someone, to annoy someone US
    • You must start reading Balzac, incidentally, but don’t let me rush you and bug you. — Jack Kerouac, Letter to Neal Cassady, p. 126, 13 September 1947
    • Don’t bug me with them Christian cats, let them goof off anyway they want to. — William “Lord” Buckley, Nero, 1951
    • Goldilocks rolled over and mumbled sleepily, “Jack, don’t bug me.” — Steve Allen, Bop Fables, p. 12, 1955
    • You want to bug us till we have to lock you up. — Rebel Without a Cause, 1955
    • Man, don’t bug me. — Jack Kerouac, The Subterraneans, p. 77, 1958
    • What really bugs him is when I say that there are many blacks who, if they were in the position, would do a little rounding up of the Eichmann types in America. — Eldridge Cleaver, Soul on Ice, p. 47, 1968
    • CARTER: What was bugging Frank? — Mike Hodges, Get Carter, p. 49, 1971
    • She didn’t even bother to pick up his clothes or belongings. Naturally, I was very bugged by that. — Herbert Huncke, Guilty of Everything, p. 156, 1990
    • Nothing bugs me ’cause everything is super. — South Park, 1999
  2. to panic, to be anxious US, 1988
    • But people came that like, did not R.S.V.P., so I was like, totally buggin’. — Clueless, 1995
  3. to watch something US
    • He sat forward to bug the picture–and again lost himself in fantasy. — Hal Ellson, The Golden Spike, p. 196, 1952
  4. to talk and act in a disassociated, irrational way while under the influence of crack cocaine US
    • — Terry Williams, Crackhouse, p. 147, 1992
  5. to confine someone in a psychiatric ward US
    • — Jay Robert Nash, Dictionary of Crime, p. 48, 1992
  6. to arm something with an alarm US, 1919
    • The question is whether they got this door bugged or not. — Vincent Patrick, Family Business, p. 209, 1985
  7. to attach or install a listening device US, 1919
    • [T]hey are even bugging her telephone and just now sent over this tape[.] — Gore Vidal, Myra Breckinridge, p. 133, 1968
  8. among vagrant alcoholics, to attack someone with bricks, bottles and boots UK
    • An alcoholic will be robbed of even a few pence he may have about him immediately he has been bugged. — Geoffrey Fletcher, Down Among the Meths Men, p. 51, 1966
  9. to dance US
    • — Joan Fontaine et al., Dictionary of Black Slang, 1968
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