释义 |
doll noun- a young woman US, 1840
- If somebody else’s dish (and we mean dish, not doll), looks particularly attractive, don’t sample it unless you’re asked to. — Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, New York Confidential, p. 223, 1948
- Tappy then sent a couple of exquisite dolls to the drunk’s table, everybody had drinks, and Tappy presented a $50 tab. — Robert Sylvester, No Cover Charge, pp. 213–214, 1956
- All the wise guys ’n dolls was jammed in–place was hysteria. — Edwin Torres, Carlito’s Way, p. 23, 1975
- Yi should see some of the hounds he’s had by the way, doll. — Ian Pattison, Rab C. Nesbitt, 1988
- a very attractive person of any sex that you find attractive US
- — Donald Webster Cory and John P. LeRoy, The Homosexual and His Society, p. 263, 1963: “A lexicon of homosexual slang”
- I bet you’re even more of a doll without your kit on. — Kevin Sampson, Outlaws, p. 130, 2001
- used as a term of address US
- — Anon., The Gay Girl’s Guide, p. 8, 1949
- Monty turned and saw a fat dyed blonde with bad teeth and too much rouge. “Wotcher, Doll,” he said guardedly. — Derek Bickerton, Payroll, p. 119, 1959
- There y’are, dolls, no offence. — Ian Pattison, Rab C. Nesbitt, 1988
- a barbiturate capsule; an amphetamine capsule or tablet US
Coined by Jacqueline Susann, author of Valley of the Dolls. - She claimed the little red “dolls” had saved her life. — Jacqueline Susann, Valley of the Dolls, p. 215, 1966
- — Richard Lingeman, Drugs from A to Z, p. 65, 1969
- — Edward R. Bloomquist, Marijuana, p. 338, 1971
- — Mike Haskins, Drugs, p. 279, 2003
- a tablet of MDMA, the recreational drug best known as ecstasy UK
- — Mike Haskins, Drugs, p. 289, 2003
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