释义 |
crew noun- a criminal gang US, 1946
- Lepke and Gurrah stepped up into an exclusive crew headed by Li’l Augie Organ[.] — Burton Turkus and Sid Feder, Murder, Inc., p. 291, 1951
- Most of my crew got washed on the way. — Edwin Torres, Carlito’s Way, p. 6, 1975
- Even after expenses on the machines and kicking money back to his crew boss, he’s got to wind up with a thousand a week. — Vincent Patrick, The Pope of Greenwich Village, p. 11, 1979
- After any kind of a drug haul, everyone in the crew indulged to the utmost. — Drugstore Cowboy, 1988
- His troubles with these two were to prove typical of the problems he encountered when he first tried to establish a crew. — Terry Williams, The Cocaine Kids, p. 14, 1989
- To become a member of a crew, you’ve got to be one hundred percent Italian so that they can trace all your relatives back to the old country. — Goodfellas, 1990
- They could have a lovers’ quarrel, give the dope to a new boyfriend not in the crew, sell it themselves, smoke it themselves. — Richard Price, Clockers, p. 5, 1992
- Bout the Crew gonna smoke us? — Jess Mowry, Way Past Cool, p. 21, 1992
- I wasted most of it with your brother and his crew. — Gone in 60 Seconds, 2000
- a tightly knit group of close friends US
- [T]hose guys made me a member of the crew. — Frederick Kohner, Gidget, p. 37, 1957
- Quite a few of the old crew are in institutions across the country, quite a few still out on the street. — John Allen, Assault with a Deadly Weapon, p. 222, 1977
- — San Francisco Sunday Examiner & Chronicle, p. 20, 2 September 1984
- — Ellen C. Bellone (Editor), Dictionary of Slang, p. 8, 1989
- So, anyway, the whole crew is going to this party in the Valley. — Clueless, 1995
- The crew won’t be visiting school today. — Karline Smith, Letters to Andy Cole, p. 139, 1998
- a group of graffiti artists who work together US
- — Jim Crotty, How to Talk American, p. 141, 1997
- Crews are one of three things: a group of people down for each other; a group of people working for the common goal of getting up, or a group of people unified through a certain style. — Stephen Power, The Art of Getting Over, p. 118, 1999
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