释义 |
drop out verb to withdraw from school, college, university or mainstream society US, 1952- “Drop out” was the message both collaborators gave the audience. — The Berkeley Barb, p. 2, 24 June 1966
- The community’s language–dropping out as opposed to climbing up–suggest vertical movement, but the real motion is lateral. — Nicholas Von Hoffman, We Are The People Our Parents Warned Us Against, p. 53, 1967
- Why did the hippie join the Parachute Corps? So he could keep dropping out! — Paul Laikin, 101 Hippie Jokes, 1968
- “Drop out” means just to drop out from the games and from the things that are meaningless. — Leonard Wolfe (Editor), Voices from the Love Generation, p. 88, 1968
- Drop Out–detach yourself from the eternal social drama which is as dehydrated and ersatz as TV. — Timothy Leary, The Politics of Ecstasy, p. 223, 1968
- “DROP OUT!” the yippies scream at them. — Jerry Rubin, Do It!, p. 115, 1970
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