释义 |
dot noun- LSD; a dose of LSD US
- Look, I’ve got blue dots I’m selling for $1.75 — Nicholas Von Hoffman, We Are The People Our Parents Warned Us Against, p. 43, 1967
- — US Department of Justice, Street Terms, October 1994
- Street names [...] blotter, cheer, dots, drop[.] — James Kay and Julian Cohen, The Parents’ Complete Guide to Young People and Drugs, p. 141, 1998
- Very tiny, often brightly-colored pills called “microdots” or “dots” still appear with some regularity in the underground acid market. — Cam Cloud, The Little Book of Acid, p. 38, 1999
- the anus US
- — Roger Blake, The American Dictionary of Sexual Terms, p. 62, 1964
- So, keeping a firm grip on the reins, he scrambled over the back of the seat, dropped his tweeds and cocked his dot over the tail-board. — Sam Weller, Old Bastards I Have Met, p. 85, 1979
- the clitoris US
- — Roger Blake, The American Dictionary of Sexual Terms, p. 62, 1964
- the bleed period of the menstrual cycle US
Remembered as late 1970s usage. - — The Museum of Menstruation and Women’s Health, 2000
- in hot rodding, a tailight US
- — Good Housekeeping, p. 143, September 1958: “Hot-rod terms for teen-age girls”
- — Tom MacPherson, Dragging and Driving, p. 136, 1960
▶ off your dot out of your senses UK, 1926- — C. I. Macafee, A Concise Ulster Dictionary, p. 57, 1996
▶ on the dot exactly punctual UK, 1909- [T]he rent’s overdue. But I want it tonight, and on the dot every week in future. — Anonymous Streetwalker, p. 58, 1959
- Unwilling to break their backs for bosses, they won’t be bought and want to clock off on the dot at five to take care of matters at home. — The Guardian, 14 July 2003
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