释义 |
honk verb- to moan, to complain UK
A military usage. - [H]e used to sit next to me honking about the state of the food. — Andy McNab, Immediate Action, p. 27, 1995
- to vomit UK, 1967
- If you need to honk, honk into this. — Wayne’s World, 1992
- [T]hey were both honking and spewing bits of carrot down the back of your neck. — Jenny Eclair, Camberwell Beauty, p. 49, 2000
- to fart
Also used as a noun. From the noise of geese–low-flying geese may be offered as an excuse–or “honk” (to smell). - — Peter Furze, Tailwinds, p. 105, 1998
- to smell badly AUSTRALIA
- — Jim Ramsay, Cop It Sweet!, 1977
- — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, p. 4, November 2003
- to inhale drugs, originally through the nose US, 1968
- [T]he slight scratching-sounds of bankers writing checks and cocaine honked through ivory straws on yachts. — Ed Sanders, Tales of Beatnik Glory, p. 92, 1975
- One day he was honking spray Pam and had a heart attack. — Eric Davis, The Slick Boys, p. 58, 1998
- Stephane, honking great lungfuls from a hash-pipe, is understandably monosyllabic[.] — Ministry, p. 49, October 2002
- when flying an aeroplane or helicopter, to pull, to jerk, to yank US, 1946
- Richards “honked” back on the controls, powering the helicopter up into an arc, hoping to escape into one of the scud clouds. — Neil Sheehan, A Bright Shining Lie, p. 774, 1988
- in drag racing, to defeat US
- — John Edwards, Auto Dictionary, p. 78, 1993
▶ honk your horn to grab a man’s penis US- “She groped you, huh, Rosso?” “Honest to God, she honked my horn,” said Ranatti, raising a rather stubby right hand heavenward. “Gave it two toots with a thumb and forefinger before I laid the iron on her wrists.” — Joseph Wambaugh, The New Centurions, pp. 175–176, 1970
▶ honk your lot to vomit UK An elaboration of HONKThe girl lights a cigarette, unaware that Hume’s about to honk his lot. — Ted Lewis, Jack Carter’s Law, p. 70, 1974 |