释义 |
bang verb- to have sex UK, 1720
- There was a young man in Havana / Banged a girl on an old player piana. — Eros, p. 63, Winter 162
- Because I haven’t banged anybody, not anybody, since we picked up Dinah, except her, of course, and this Margo is real cute. — John Clellon Holmes, Go, p. 137, 1952
- At one sharp he rushes from Marylou to Camille–of course neither one of them knows that’s going on–and bangs her once, giving me time to arrive at one thirty. — Jack Kerouac, On the Road, pp. 42–43, 1957
- But how long did it take for those guys to bang off a quick one, in the middle of the afternoon, in their inviolable offices? — James Baldwin, Another Country, p. 273, 1962
- That’s what makes you so goofy, banging her so much. — Jim Thompson, Pop. 1280, p. 191, 1964
- I suppose she’s a real gunner; bangs away, huh? — John Nichols, The Sterile Cuckoo, p. 88, 1965
- [T]his other woman he was banging regular[.] — Johnny Speight, It Stands to Reason, p. 53, 1973
- JAKE: You know, like bang her or anything? JOEY: Ah, no, no. I didn’t bang her. — Raging Bull, 1980
- I get enough just banging crazily away on the set. — Adult Video, p. 9, August/September 1986
- The only way he could bang regular chicks is with a Cryptoninte condom, but that would kill him. — Mallrats, 1995
- Shep! What the hell are you doing? I’m banging that girl! — Fargo, 1996
- Guys banged in her any position they so desired. — Anthony Petkovich, The X Factory, p. 183, 1997
- Little matter to me that this woman chose to pursue a career in pornography, nor that she has been “banging” Jackie Treehorn, to use the parlance of our times. — The Big Lebowski, 1998
- Even Dave Dummings, a fiftysomething ex-Army colonel, has marketed himself as the sexy older man who doesn’t need Viagra and gets to bang beautiful young chicks half his age. — Ana Loria, 1 2 Be A Porn Star!, p. 110, 2000
- to stimulate a woman’s vagina by introducing and withdrawing a finger in rapid order US
- — Eugene Landy, The Underground Dictionary, p. 28, 1971
- to inhale or to inject a drug intraveneously US, 1926
- If he’d taken an overdose of cocaine, I’d have to bang him with heroin to counteract it. — Ethel Water, His Eye is on the Sparrow, p. 148, 1952
- Angel nodded off immediately, hitting himself and banging it all in at once[.] — Hal Ellson, The Golden Spike, p. 95, 1952
- He groaned as he banged himself in the arm while the mixture was still warm. — Chester Himes, A Rage in Harlem, p. 38, 1957
- My habit screwed my mind up. All I wanted to do was bang “H” and “coast.” — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), Pimp, p. 99, 1969
- to swallow a tablet UK
- I’ve done 12 [ecstasy tablets] in one night. You bang one, you go out, you have a good night. — Drugs An Adult Guide [quoting Brian Harvey of pop group East 17], p. 8, December 2001
- to engage in youth gang criminal activity US
- In most of Los Angeles, gang members contend that for all the publicity about the killings, the gangs themselves are pretty quiet. “Ain’t nobody banging no more,” they insist. — Los Angeles Times, p. 1, June 1986
- “People who never banged in their life.” — Leon Bing, Do or Die, p. 221, 1991
- OLDER SHERIFF: Are you a Crip or a Blood? CAINE: I don’t bang. — Menace II Society, 1993
- I started banging when I was ten years old. — Yusuf Jah, Uprising, p. 25, 1995
- Curiously, the 18th Street gangsters, who have definite roots in the L.A. area, nevertheless claim norte while bangin’ in EPA. — Bill Valentine, Gangs and Their Tattoos, p. 112, 2000
- (of dance music) to have a danceable beat AUSTRALIA
- Flow is essential. It’s not enough to just keep it banging. It’s important to remember someone is always listening. — Sydney Scope Magazine, p. 44, 2001
- to make a turn US
- — Current Slang, p. 1, Summer 1969
▶ bang balls to have a plan backfire SINGAPORE- — Paik Choo, The Coxford Singlish Dictionary, p. 11, 2002
▶ bang ears to talk idly US- “[T]he other day he was banging ears with the Old Man again. He tells us he hates him and every chance he gets he sneaks up there and bangs ears.” — Thomas Heggen, Mister Roberts, p. 65, 1946
▶ bang goes that used for suggesting that something has come to an end NEW ZEALAND- — David McGill, David McGill’s Complete Kiwi Slang Dictionary, p. 13, 1998
▶ bang heads to fight US- — Hy Lit, Hy Lit’s Unbelievable Dictionary of Hip Words for Groovy People, p. 3, 1968
▶ bang like a dunny door; bang like a hammer on a nail to be an exceptional sexual partner AUSTRALIA Many variations, including “bang like a rattlesnake”, “bang like a shithouse door in a gale” and “bang like a shithouse rat”.- I thought, kiss my bum if that sheila wouldn’t bang like a dunny door. — Barry Humphries, The Wonderful World of Barry McKenzie, p. 44, 1968
- I’m just an ordinary bloke lookin’ for a nice simple homely sheilah with blue eyes and yellow hair who bangs like a shithouse door in a gale. — Barry Humphries, Bazza Pulls It Off!, 1971
- [T]he other side of coinages like “sink the sausage” and “bangs like a dunny door in a gale” is spurious and pays out despair and disaster to many women and children. — Nancy Keesing, Lily on the Dustbin, p. 53, 1982
- I said we were banging away like a shit-house door in a gale, and tried hard to make this dream a reality. — Frank Skinner, Frank Skinner, p. 225, 2001
▶ bang the crap out of of a male, to exhaust a sex-partner by vigorous sexual activity UK An intensification of BANGTheir favourite [porn film] star is Rocco, a Brazilian guy who bangs the crap out of girls[.] — Mixmag, p. 5, April 2003 |