释义 |
get off verb- to form an initial liaison with someone sexually attractive, especially with a view to greater intimacy UK, 1925
- I heard that one of our Sergeants had been sniffing around, you know – trying to get off with her. — Clive Exton, No Fixed Abode [Six Granada Plays], p. 123, 1959
- “How did you get on with them birds you had on Saturday?” In fact Barney and Ginger hadn’t got on at all. Or got off. — John Burke and Stuart Douglass, The Boys, p. 100, 1962
- to achieve sexual climax US, 1867
- Annie got off on her own fingers while describing exactly what it felt like to her ex-husband on the telephone[.] — Doug Lang, Freaks, p. 30, 1973
- When you’re turned out, pimps put that in your head. “You don’t get off with tricks.” — Susan Hall, Ladies of the Night, p. 29, 1973
- “You mean you didn’t get off once?” — D. M. Perkins, Deep Throat, p. 32, 1973
- Harry Reems made a reputation as one of those rare people with “the ability to always get it off.” — Kenneth Turan and Stephen E. Zito, Sinema, p. 182, 1974
- Q: “She can’t get off”–“getting off” meaning in this context what? A: “Getting off” in this context indicates that she has trouble achieving an orgasm. MR. JUSTICE MOCATTA: She has what? A: She has trouble achieving an orgasm, a sexual climax. — Frank Zappa, The Real Frank Zappa Book, pp. 136–137, 1989
- They’re just tapes that he makes so he can sit around and get off. — Sex, Lies and Videotape, 1989
- There’s come all over the sheets – he got off before he got offed. — Basic Instinct, 1992
- [N]ot wanting to hurt her feelings by just paying up and getting off. — Kevin Sampson, Powder, p. 56, 1999
- I mean, it’s sex, okay? It’s two people – in a bed – getting off! It’s not some ethereal thing out there to embrace humanity. — 200 Cigarettes, 1999
- Oh, that’s where you have sex for a really long time and don’t get off. — The Village Voice, 30 January 2001
- to use a drug; to feel the effects of a drug US, 1952
- We got a free bag, and he asked me if I ever got off before. — Jeremy Larner and Ralph Tefferteller, The Addict in the Street, p. 210, 1964
- When he has finally injected the heroin (he calls it “shooting up,” “taking off,” “getting off”), he may or may not go on a “nod”–his eyelids heavy, his mind wandering pleasantly[.] — James Mills, The Panic in Needle Park, p. 15, 1966
- “How many mikes?” Papa All wanted to know. “Ahh, I dunno. They’ll get ya off.” — Nicholas Von Hoffman, We Are The People Our Parents Warned Us Against, p. 26, 1967
- That woman knew he hadn’t got off since six this evening, and it was close to eleven now. — Nathan Heard, Howard Street, p. 15, 1968
- And this would get the reindeer off, man? — Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong, Santa Calus and his Old Lady, 1971
- Man, I am so fucking messed up and ripped! I got off on the first hit, man!? — John Rechy, The Fourth Angel, p. 32, 1972
- by extension, to take pleasure from something US, 1952
- Well, I don’t know if you knew this, but half the girls in this place are take-home whores anyway, they get off on shit like that. — Hard Eight, 1996
- to crash while riding a motorcyle US, 2003
Sarcastic and euphemistic biker (motorcyle) usage.
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