释义 |
gee-gees noun- horse races UK, 1869
Singular “gee gee” is a “(race)horse” and “the gee gees” means “horse racing”–both of which are used in the UK from 1869. - “Easy seeing you don’t go to the gee-gees.” “What’s that got to do with it?” — Frank Hardy, The Yarns of Billy Borker, p. 48, 1965
- — James Holledge, The Great Australian Gamble, p. 139, 1966
- — Lance Peters, The Dirty Half-Mile, p. 39, 1979
- [H]e’s been pissing away his readies on the gee gees[.] — Greg Williams, Diamond Geezers, 1997
- veterinary drugs IRELAND
- But if Squirrel had gone to drama classes instead of spending his evenings casing gaffs, perfecting handbrake turns in stolen cars and developing an unhealthy appetite for palf and gee-gees, then he might have been up there on the screen himself. — Howard Paul, The Joy, p. 103, 1996
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