释义 |
jug verb- to arrest or imprison US, 1841
- — Vincent J Monteleone, Criminal Slang, 1949
- Thanks for the plug, but that wasn’t why I got jugged. — Raymond Chandler, The Long Goodbye, p. 95, 1953
- “I’ll have the cops send over the squad cars the night before the election and jug all the hoodlums[.]” — Alson Smith, Syndicate City, p. 104, 1954
- She thought I had flapped my jaws and gotten jugged as a material witness hostage. — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), The Naked Soul of Iceberg Slim, p. 105, 1971
- The law was one of those Catch-22 things that put you in jail. If you complied with the federal law to buy stamps, then the state law got you for being a bookmaker. If you didn’t buy the stamps, the feds jugged you. — Mario Puzo, Inside Las Vegas, p. 291, 1977
- The judge was perplexed by his behavior because there was no chance whatsoever that he would have jugged the kid if he’d come in[.] — George V. Higgins, Penance for Jerry Kennedy, p. 112, 1985
- to attack someone with a jug of boiling water, especially sugared water UK
- — Angela Devlin, Prison Patter, p. 67, 1996
- “Jug him!” said one man (meaning to scald him with a jug or two of boiling water from the urn, mixed with sugar so it would stick). “Cut him!” said another. — The Guardian, 30 March 2000: “A life inside”
- to have sex with US
- There were few women around the neighborhood that Jonny wanted to jugg and didn’t juff, even if they were married. — Claude Brown, Manchild in the Promised Land, p. 115, 1965
- You ain’t been me, Panther, playing possum boo-koo [many] times she’s come in way late ... don’t take no bath ‘cause she’s done had one after he finished jugging in her. — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), Doom Fox, p. 183, 1978
- to stab US
- — William D. Alsever, Glossary for the Establishment and Other Uptight People, p. 17, December 1970
▶ see: JUKE |