释义 |
buzzer noun- a badge US, 1914
- Next time ask to see the buzzer. — Raymond Chandler, The Little Sister, p. 19, 1949
- I flashed my buzzer. So did Velda. — Mickey Spillane, One Lonely Night, p. 91, 1951
- The one who had flashed the buzzer was of medium height, spare built[.] — Robert Edmond Alter, Carny Kill, p. 109, 1966
- Grave Digger fished a felt-lined leather folder from his side coat pocket and showed his buzzer. — Chester Himes, Come Back Charleston Blue, p. 19, 1966
- The War of Garry’s Badge began when Mayor Alioto’s new police commissioners, in the first flush of the power and the glory, issued a bunch of golden buzzers to friends of the new regime. — San Francisco Examiner, p. 35, 21 January 1970
- I flashed my buzzer, is all. — Joseph Wambaugh, Fugitive Nights, p. 206, 1992
- a burglar alarm US
- — Vincent J. Monteleone, Criminal Slang, p. 41, 1949
- a door-bell US, 1934
- in a hospital casualty department, a defibrillator paddle US
- — Sally Williams, “Strong” Words, p. 135, 1994
- in horse racing, a battery-powered device used illegally by a jockey to shock a horse during a race US, 1942
- Jockey Gets “Life” for Using Buzzer [Headline] — San Francisco News, p. 19, 26 May 1950
- — David W. Maurer, Argot of the Racetrack, p. 17, 1951
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