释义 |
kraut noun- a German US, 1841
From the German dish sauerkraut; not necessarily disparaging. - Isn’t it niggers, Dadier? And spics? And krauts, Dadier? — Evan Hunter, The Blackboard Jungle, p. 209, 1954
- The lousy slob ratted on me to the M.P.’s about liberating 10 grand of some kraut’s gold hoard back in ‘45[.] — Mickey Spillane, Me, Hood!, p. 15, 1963
- Now I saw, get the Krauts on the other side of the fence where they belong, and let’s get back to the kind of enemy worth killing and the kind of war this whole country can support. — Harold and Maude, 1971
- Birds, locally. I mean apart from the Krauts, you see, well, there’s the odd wife[.] — Mike Stott, Soldiers Talking, Cleanly, 1978
- I’ve read his stuff, Plimpl, he’s heavy duty. I think he’s a kraut. — Terry Southern, Now Dig This, p. 234, 1984
- I know I’m not meant to say Krauts and that. One thing I myself am not is a racialist. — Kevin Sampson, Outlaws, p. 7, 2001
- the German language US, 1948
- "You speak kraut?" says Mike. [...] "Frog [French]?" he pursued gamely. — Derek Raymond (Robin Cook), The Crust on its Uppers, p. 46, 1962
- Another guy don’t speak nothing but Kraut, he comes all the way from West Germany. — Elmore Leonard, Split Images, p. 109, 1981
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