释义 |
floss verb- to behave with ostentatious style and flair US
- A fear of muhfucka flossin’ (mackin’ or showing off) too hard. — Hip-Hop Connection, p. 22, July 2002
- to show off US
- Super John Doe needed a vehicle to floss in. — Stephen Power, The Art of Getting Over, p. 26, 1999
- Just because you have a new car, you don’t have to floss. — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, p. 3, Spring 1999
- Wes grinned, flossin’ his gold tooth with the princess-cut rock. — Linden Dalecki, Kid B, p. 9, 2006
- to wear expensive clothes and jewels UK
Used by urban black youths. - The Queen is always flossin’. — Live, p. 38, Winter 2004
- to wash US
- The sky was gray out this way, so not many people were getting their hoopties flossed[.] — Eric Jerome Dickey, Cheaters, pp. 225–226, 1999
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