释义 |
fit noun- the equipment needed to inject a drug US, 1959
A shortened form of OUTFIT- I’m waiting for you to finish cleaning your fit and get away from the basin, so I can use mine. — Clarence Cooper Jr, The Scene, p. 249, 1960
- I don’t know what they had planned, but they sure was making a fit. — Joseph Wambaugh, The Blue Knight, p. 30, 1973
- — William K. Bentley and James M. Corbett, Prison Slang, p. 80, 1992
- — Angela Devlin, Prison Patter, p. 52, 1996
- an outfit of clothing US
- — David Claerbaut, Black Jargon in White America, p. 64, 1972
- — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, p. 7, Spring 1994
▶ have a fit; have forty fits to lose your temper, to become very angry UK, 1877- Father would have forty fits if she were let loose in the old house. — Carola Dunn, Mistletoe and Murder, p. 52, 2002
- The poor Puritans would have had a fit on April 9, with bells and crosses and copes and unbleached candles burning in daylight and a Roman cardinal standing in the chancel. — The Daily Telegraph, 13 April 2002
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