释义 |
come down verb- to experience the easing of drug intoxication US, 1959
- — Burton H. Wolfe, The Hippies, p. 203, 1968
- — Angela Devlin, Prison Patter, p. 39, 1996
- You’re high and you need to come down. Sleep it off, Dirk. — Boogie Nights, 1997
- to experience the easing of drug intoxication US
- — Bruce Jackson, Outside the Law, p. 56, 1972
- You take a lot of guys that when they come down the first or second time to the penitentiary, they come down with a good reputation from the streets[.] — Bruce Jackson, Outside the Law, p. 170, 1972
- (of a river) to flood; to be inundated AUSTRALIA, 1868
Many Australian rivers are mostly dry for a large part of the year and then fill, often quite suddenly, during the wet season. - This was the last train to get over the Finke [river] for more than a week because it came down again almost immediately. — Patsy Adam-Smith, Folklore of the Australian Railwaymen, p. 39, 1969
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