释义 |
doughnut noun- a tightly driven full circle, typically executed by young drivers who leave tyre marks from the sharp turns and acceleration US
- Spin a doughnut–Make a tight turn. — Fremont Drag Strip, Guide to Drag Racing, 1960
- He could spin donuts on that hog with is feet on the pegs. — Hunter S. Thompson, Hell’s Angels, p. 64, 1967
- — Current Slang, p. 4, Winter 1971
- — John Edwards, Auto Dictionary, p. 46, 1993
- We fishtailed when we hit gravel, and we turned doughnuts when we hit wet spots. — James Ellroy, Hollywood Nocturnes, p. 185, 1994
- Utes are also essential for “circle work”, a rural mating ritual at B&S balls in which farm boys wearing tuxedos do doughnuts in paddocks while girls watch on, ideally weak with lust and admiration. — Sydney Morning Herald, p. 8s, 29 June 1996
- “Apparently there was some back and forth between (drivers) in two cars. They were driving in circles, doing doughnuts,” Pursell said. — San Francisco Chronicle, p. 17, 24 December 2000
- a tyre; in motor racing, a fat, treadless tyre US, 1922
- — John Lawlor, How to Talk Car, p. 38, 1965
- a traffic roundabout UK
- — Peter Chippindale, The British CB Book, p. 154, 1981
- an undersized, often illegal, steering wheel US
- — Edith A. Folb, runnin’ down some lines, p. 235, 1980
- any material produced to be played on the radio which leaves a silent space in the middle for information provided by the announcer US
- — Walter Hurst and Donn Delson, Delson’s Dictionary of Radio & Record Industry Terms, p. 38, 1980
- the anus AUSTRALIA
- [N]obody’s ever tried to slip their pollywaffle [penis] up my doughnut. — Barry Humphries, The Traveller’s Tool, p. 19, 1985
- the inside of a round, hollow wave US
- — Michael V. Anderson, The Bad, Rad, Not to Forget Way Cool Beach and Surf Discriptionary, p. 5, 1988
- a fool, a crazy person UK
Probably abbreviated from DOUGHNUT HEADNUT - Some right doughnuts come up with potentially great ideas only to fuck them up[.] — Danny King, The Burglar Diaries, p. 34, 2001
- That Sandy isn’t cool–she’s a donut and a Jockey Slut. — Colin Butts, Is Harry Still on the Boat?, p. 363, 2003
|