释义 |
hammer noun- the penis US
- — Dale Gordon, The Dominion Sex Dictionary, p. 81, 1967
- They had lost all fear of his hammer. Earlier they had teased it mercilessly, using both pairs of hands to stroke the shaft while passing the head from one mouth to the other. — Lexy Harper, Bedtime Erotica for Men, p. 49, 2006
- “Shut up,” I whispered back as I shoved my hammer into her hole. — Shaun Mathis, This Hurts, p. 251, 2007
- a handgun US
- Hours after the shooting death of graduate student Al-Moez Alimohamed, two of his alleged teen-age killers reportedly sat in jail laughing and singing.“Yo, I got my hammer,” Ollie “Homicide” Taylor, 15, and Anthony Archer, 15, rapped through their laughter. — Times-Picayune (New Orleans), p. A11, 2 October 1994
- heroin NEW ZEALAND, 1982
- They just seem to think that they are ordinary people selling hammer (as they call heroin). — Frank Hardy, Hardy’s People, p. 105, 1986
- — Harry Orsman, A Dictionary of Modern New Zealand Slang, p. 63, 1999
- “Then some cunt in Sydney had the bright idea that the hippies might get tired of smoking their own shit, and they might like the hammer.” “The hammer?” “Heroin.” — Brian Preston, Pot Planet, p. 91, 2002
- — Mike Haskins, Drugs, p. 284, 2003
- an attractive girl or young woman US, 1970
- — David Claerbaut, Black Jargon in White America, p. 67, 1972
- — American Speech, p. 154, Spring-Summer 1972: “An approach to Black slang”
- a pizza with ham topping US
- — Maledicta, p. 13, 1996: ‘Domino’s pizza jargon’
- an accelerator pedal US, 1974
Citizens’ band radio slang, often as “back off the hammer” (to slow down) and “put the hammer down” (to accelerate). - I says “Pigpen, this here’s Rubber Duck / And I’m about to put the hammer down. — C.W. McCall, Convoy, 1976
- Put the hammer down and I didn’t let her up until I hit Ludlow. — George V. Higgins, The Rat on Fire, p. 106, 1981
- in shuffleboard, the eighth and final shot US
- — Omero C. Catan, Secrets of Shuffleboard Strategy, p. 67, 1967: ‘Glossary of terms’
- in bar dice games, the player who wins the chance to play first US
- — Jester Smith, Games They Play in San Francisco, p. 104, 1971
▶ on your hammer- following close behind; tailing AUSTRALIA, 1942
From HAMMER AND NAILThe Australian Language, 1945) to be from “hammer and tack” for “track”, but “to be on someone’s track” is not idiomatic. - Wonder why he didn’t try and pull round on our hammer, skip? — W.R. Bennett, Night Intruder, p. 33, 1962
- If we c’n toss this joker sitting on our hammer. — W.R. Bennett, Night Intruder, p. 68, 1962
- There’s a bloody night-fighter right on that bloke’s hammer! — W.R. Bennett, Night Intruder, p. 117, 1962
- badgering AUSTRALIA
From HAMMER AND TACK- The child was on his hammer from the moment he woke. She pestered him impatiently. — D’Arcy Niland, The Shiralee, p. 37, 1955
- I’ll keep on Pauline Fraser’s hammer[.] — Stuart Mills, Wives and Lovers, p. 114, 1976
▶ put the hammer on to press someone for something IRELAND- He called for a large bottle and paid for it, which led me to presume that he must have put the hammer on Johnny for a few quid. — Billy Roche, Tumbling Down, p. 12, 1984
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