释义 |
acid noun- LSD US
- [T]hen got up late that night, got loaded on acid & went bar-hopping to hear some great Rock & Roll. — Neal Cassady, The First Third, p. 218, 1965
- Last night as I left the U.C. theater on University Avenue, a guy walking behind me said to his friend: “That was better than acid, man.” — The Berkeley Barb, p. 2, 17 December 1965
- Contrary to all expectations, most of the Angels became oddly peaceful on acid. — Hunter S. Thompson, Hell’s Angels, p. 238, 1966
- She did not want to be left out and requested the acid. — Richard Alpert and Sidney Cohen, LSD, p. 42, 1966
- — J. L. Simmons and Barry Winograd, It’s Happening, p. 167, 1966
- I was on a trip and haven’t stopped tripping ... without acid! — East Village Other, 20 August 1969
- Acid, booze and ass / Needles, guns and grass / Lots of laughs, lots of laughs. — Joni Mitchell, Blue, 1971
- I can’t really recommend acid because acid has become an almost meaningful chemical. — The Last Supplement to the Whole Earth Catalog, p. 83, March 1971
- So we were not greatly surprised when Eldrige Cleaver announced in Algeria last year that he had placed Dr. Leary under Black Panther arrest for his continued use of “acid.” — Christina and Richard Milner, Black Players, p. 168, 1972
- Well, Donny’s in a coma. He had a very bad acid experience. — Manhattan, 1979
- They approved of acid and pot and generally most of the hallucinogens[.] — Herbert Huncke, Guilty of Everything, p. 167, 1990
- Writer Ken Kesey and his Merry Pranksters – a travelling caravan which included Neal Cassady [...] and houseband the Grateful Dead, not to mention a bus called Furthur – gave acid a fresh boost as a mind-expanding panacea. — Simon Warner, Rockspeak!, p. 272, 1996
- At the first rush I’m waiting for the acid to reach the E and lift it higher. — Melanie McGrath, Hard, Soft and Wet, p. 90, 1998
- rum BARBADOS
- — Frank A. Collymore, Barbadian Dialect, p. 10, 1965
- by extension from sense 2, any alcoholic beverage TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO
- — Lise Winer, Dictionary of the English/Creole of Trinidad and Tobago, 2003
- impudence, heavy sarcasm UK, 1962
Especially in the phrase “come the old acid”. - didn’t altogether take to Raymond ... too much of the old acid. — Martin Waddell, Otley, p. 101, 1966
▶ put the acid on- to pressure someone; to put someone to the test AUSTRALIA, 1906
From “acid test”. - The day gangs have been ordered to the Port. Eight o’clock. They want to shift the ship at seven. That puts acid on us. We’re in the biggest hatch; from all accounts the others will be finished at six. — John Morrison, Stories of the Waterfront, p. 53, 1945
- Macauley, who knew the ropes, took the initiative and got busy with the yardman, putting the acid on him to help them to clean up a bit. — D’Arcy Niland, The Shiralee, p. 76, 1955
- With young Cynthia growing up and no poppa, Edna evidently had a pang of conscience but she wasn’t going to lower herself to put the acid on me. — John Wynnum, Jiggin’ in the Riggin’, p. 59, 1965
- to pressure someone sexually AUSTRALIA, 1939
- And if you were thinking of putting the acid on that beaut short-haired bird in the leather gear at the office, think again. — Suzy Jarratt, Permissive Australia, p. 54, 1970
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