释义 |
bum verb- to engage in anal intercourse UK, 1999
From BUM - Right away he thought, “There’s me three suckers over there.” So he walked over to them and he bummed them. — John Gimenez, Up Tight!, p. 79, 1967
- His name was Bummer Bob because he was the first person in San Francisco to call panhandling “bumming.” — Pamela Des Barres, I’m With the Band, p. 48, 1988
- I thought he was bumming Keva! Honest to God! I hears this mad moaning [...] just mad talking really... Oh my God! You’ve got your cock up me... fuck my butt, you bastard! — Kevin Sampson, Powder, p. 408, 1999
- They’re only kids and you want to bum them. — John King, Human Punk, p. 81, 2000
- to beg; to borrow something without the expectation of returning it US, 1857
- Sure, I always got cigarettes. Reason is, I’m a bum. I bum them whenever I get the chance is why my pack lasts longer than Harding’s here. — Ken Kesey, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, p. 173, 1962
- I bum a cigarette from one. We’re all brothers. — Abbie Hoffman, Revolution for the Hell of It, p. 19, 1968
- — Columbia Missourian, p. 1A, 19 October 1998
- to feel poorly or depressed US, 1989
- There I was, bumming about Cassandra, and out of the blue, I meet Bjergen, Bjergen Kjergen from Knuergen near the Jbergen Fjords. — Wayne’s World 2, 1993
- Something about having to hear the woman you really like going to the toilet always bummed me. — Airheads, 1994
- to have a bad experience with a hallucinogenic drug US
- "He’s bumming,” comes Manny’s voice. “We have to get him out,” Shell says. For them, the drug’s spell has ended. And they realize that for Jerry the insane world has spilled into reality. — John Rechy, The Fourth Angel, p. 130, 1972
- in computing, to improve something by removing or rearranging it US
- “I bummed the program not to write the file if it would be empty.” — Guy L. Steele et al., The Hacker’s Dictionary, p. 39, 1983
- to wander, to idle, to live as a vagrant AUSTRALIA, 1933
- to boast, to brag UK, 1937
Also used as “bum up”. - He’s always bummin himself up. — Michael Munro, The Original Patter, p. 14, 1985
- to enjoy something UK
- [H]e bums that game so much. — news.bbc.co.uk, 10 June 2005: A lexicon of teen speak
- He bums his PS2 wicked. — Lucy van Amerongen, The A–Z of Teen Talk, p. 10, 2007
▶ bum your chaff; bum your chat; bum your load to tell a tall story to impress or convince someone UK, 1937 |