释义 |
butt noun- the buttocks, the posterior; used in many senses and phrases as a replacement for “arse” or “ass” UK, 1720
- “you can’t tell it none now but her butt was twice as big last summer.” — Sylvia Wilkinson, A Killing Frost, p. 29, 1967
- It’s the perils of coaching. You work your butt off, and then get kicked in it. — Honolulu Advertiser, 27 April 2003
- by extension, the tail end of anything US
- — Current Slang, p. 15, Winter 1970
- the tail end of a prison sentence US
- — Vincent J. Monteleone, Criminal Slang, p. 40, 1949
- When we were getting short and someone asked how long we had left, we said “Six days and a butt.” “Four days and a butt.” The butt is your last morning. — Malcolm Braley, False Starts, p. 199, 1976
- — William K. Bentley and James M. Corbett, Prison Slang, p. 18, 1992
- a cigarette US, 1902
- “Now ya can buy butts, kid,” Chirechillo said. — Nathan Heard, Howard Street, p. 107, 1968
- I took packs of butts to the coal pile the next day. — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), Pimp, p. 260, 1969
- “I quit smoking, right? You remember that? I got off the butts.” — George Higgins, The Digger’s Game, p. 50, 1973
- We’ll give you a slice of pizza and a pack of butts. — Richard Price, The Wanderers, p. 20, 1974
- It drove Rocco nuts; guys would buy ten loose cigarettes on ten trips for a dollar fifty when they could have bought a pack–twice as many butts for the same price. — Richard Price, Clockers, p. 264, 1992
|