释义 |
flag noun- a criminal gang’s lookout US
- — Vincent J. Monteleone, Criminal Slang, p. 85, 1949
- while injecting a drug into a vein, the flow of blood up into the syringe, indicating that the vein has been pierced US
- — Geoffrey Froner, Digging for Diamonds, p. 29, 1989
- in computing, a variable that has two values US
- — Eric S. Raymond, The New Hacker’s Dictionary, p. 157, 1991
- in gambling, a wager of 23 bets consisting of four selections UK
- — David Bennet, Know Your Bets, p. 38, 2001
- the grade “F” US
- — Collin Baker et al., College Undergraduate Slang Study Conducted at Brown University, p. 117, 1968
- the ground floor of a tiered prison cellblock US
- — William K. Bentley and James M. Corbett, Prison Slang, p. 7, 1992
- a one-pound note AUSTRALIA
- — Ned Wallish, The Truth Dictionary of Racing Slang, p. 29, 1989
- a variable which changes value when a certain condition is reached US
- — Eric S. Raymond, The New Hacker’s Dictionary, p. 157, 1991
▶ have your flag in port to experience the bleed period of the menstrual cycle US- After the end of the month rolls around and that bitch’s flag jump back in port/then keep every inch a your natural prick right down her pricksucken throat. — Bruce Jackson, Get Your Ass in the Water and Swim Like Me, p. 129, 1966
▶ the flag is up; the red flag is up experiencing the bleed period of the menstrual cycle US- — Maledicta, p. 197, Winter 1980: “A new erotic vocabulary”
- — Karen Houppert, The Curse, 1999
|