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词组 jack
释义 jack
verb
  1. to steal, to take by force – especially of street crime US, 1930 Adopted from “JACK” (to hijack).
    • I knew that Bobo had snuck in again, and now he was trying to jack me for a dollar. — Joe Bob Briggs, Joe Bob Goes to the Drive-In, p. 14, 1987
    • Who was it nigga? Who jacked you? — Menace II Society, 1993
    • Li’l G.C. and I had jacked a civilian for his car one night. — Sanyika Shakur, Monster, p. 193, 1993
    • Even Al Gore can’t muster enough balls to admit the fact that he got jacked. — Suroosh Alvi et al., The Vice Guide, p. 196, 2002
    • Someone tries to jack me probably every week. — The Guardian, p. 9, 27 February 2002
    • If you’re wearing a hundred grand round your neck, you’ve gotta think about other things. Like you might get jacked. — Mixmag, p. 75, April 2003
  2. to lift or raise or move something, as with a carjack AUSTRALIA
    • “Nisbet,” he snapped, “if you c’n hear me, then jack that bloody aircraft round!” — W.R. Bennett, Wingman, p. 13, 1961
    • [T]he least you can do, dear boy, is jack yourself off your fat bronze and see what it’s all about. — W.R. Bennett, Wingman, p. 72, 1961
    • Hoisting myself up as it peaked, I was jacked heavily and took a verticle drop. — Kathy Lette, Girls’ Night Out, p. 190, 1987
    • [T]here was always the possibility that an armed accomplice could burst into the courtroom and try to jack her out. — William Dodson, The Sharp End, p. 110, 2001
  3. (of a male) to masturbate US
    • I wanted to take my dick out and start jacking right there. — Kids, 1995
  4. to convey a cartridge into the chamber of a firearm AUSTRALIA
    • Ivana jacked another round into the chamber. — Harrison Biscuit, The Search for Savage Henry, p. 86, 1995
  5. to abandon, to dismiss UK, 1961
    • Jacked me for a civvy. — Alexander Baron, From the City, from the Plough, 1948
    • 5 or 7 miles in boots, followed by sit-ups and press-ups, then 100 metre piggyback races and fireman’s carries up hills. More people jacked. — Andy McNab, Immediate Action, p. 59, 1995
  6. to serve (a prison sentence) US
    • Said, “Gee, judge, that’s no time/ I got a brother on Levenworth jackin’ ninety-nine.” — Bruce Jackson, Get Your Ass in the Water and Swim Like Me, p. 52, 1966
  7. to move the plunger of a hypodermic syringe back and forth AUSTRALIA
    • Having ingeniously dealt with this crisis Rick had a long soothing shot jacking the plunger to extend the flash[.] — Kevin Mackey, The Cure, p. 107, 1970
  8. to flush blood in and out of a hypodermic syringe AUSTRALIA
    • SUTTON: (ritual injection nervously verbalizing, jacking the blood) It give you something to live for. — Kevin Mackey, The Cure, p. 2, 1970
  9. to cease; to shirk UK
    • The Felstedian, December 1947
jack your jaw
to talk incessantly US
  • “My problem is that I’d rather put people in jail than sit around the Field Office all day jacking my jaws about how much the federal cost-of-living pay raise is going to be,” Chance said. — Gerald Petievich, To Live and Die in L.A., p. 27, 1983
jack your joint
to manoeuvre your penis during sex US
  • [H]e’d be working, jacking his joint, lost, working at it, and he could feel the come building[.] — Joel Rose, Kill Kill Faster Faster, p. 163, 1997
jack your root
to frustrate US
  • — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, p. 4, Fall 1980
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