释义 |
'Frisco nickname San Francisco, California US, 1849 Never used by San Franciscans, and a sure sign of a tourist.- “I was up there once,” I said. “I like Frisco, it’s a good city.” — Chester Himes, If He Hollers Let Him Go, p. 41, 1945
- In which case, if you came to Frisco, I could still see you and Allen, but couldn’t ship out. — Jack Kerouac, Letter to Neal Cassady, p. 114, 26 August 1947
- Frantic Frisco, yes, frenzied Frisco, yes, Fateful Frisco. Frisco of frivolous folly. — Neal Cassady, Neal Cassady Collected Letters 1944–1967, p. 122, 3 July 1949: Letter to Jack Kerouac
- Washington’s Chinatown is neither as large as Frisco’s, as colorful as New York’s, nor as odoriferous as Boston’s. — Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, Washington Confidential, p. 57, 1951
- Hell, I could get a farm someplace, maybe out near Frisco with Hart Kennedy. — John Clellon Holmes, Go, p. 51, 1952
- We wished each other luck. We would meet in Frisco. — Jack Kerouac, On the Road, p. 57, 1957
- She had me out to Frisco for two weeks over the New Year’s holidays. — Babs Gonzales, Movin’ On Down De Line, p. 148, 1975
- In the seat next to her, an aggressive sailor made inane conversation about “Frisco,” boring her with endless details about his tour of duty on Treasure Island. — Armistead Maupin, Tales of the City, p. 197, 1978
- Folks who live here think it’s hokey to call it Frisco. — Seth Morgan, Homeboy, p. 383, 1990
- The term “Frisco,” for so long a nickname non grata in these parts, is making a comeback as mysterious as those random, unclaimed single socks on the folding table. — San Francisco Chronicle, p. D1, 14 October 2003
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