释义 |
crowd-surf verb to pass over the heads of a crowd, propelled and supported by the hands of that crowd US, 1993- Men, now you can stagedive and crowdsurf, and maybe get a look at the band before the security nazis throw you off the stage. — talk.bizarre, 18 January 1992
- With the club’s tables and chairs tucked away, the flannel-clad crowd had plenty of room to dance and crowd-surf, which the band encouraged. — Buffalo (New York) News, p. 5, 25 October 1993
- Suddenly there was a thunderous roar from the crowd. “Oh, shit. He’s gone crowd-surfing.” — Ben Elton, High Society, p. 172, 2002
- They had a bunch of people, and they would make guys crowd surf. — Suroosh Alvi et al., The Vice Guide, p. 313, 2002
- Instead he [Grant Nicholas, Feeder] is positively cheery between songs–quipping to fans “getting crushed at the front” and expressing bemusement when some crowd-surf “to a song with strings[.]” — Guardian, 21 February 2003
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