释义 |
biff noun- a blow, a hit, a whack US, 1847
- [G]et your kicks and biffs. It’s your night! — Lester Bangs, Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung, p. 38, 1970
- Then a biff from an idea that blowled him over. — Neal Cassady, The First Third, p. 168, 1971
- fighting, especially fighting on a sporting field AUSTRALIA
- [W]e don’t hold a bit of biff against a player who turns in a blinder. — Alexander Buzo, The Roy Murphy Show, p. 111, 1970
- [He was a] Manly Rugby League player who didn’t mind a bit of biff. — Roy Slaven (John Doyle), Five South Coast Seasons, p. 170, 1992
- The Australians are too big, fast, mobile and too well-drilled to be beaten. Great Britain’s only hope may be to resort to the biff. — Paul Vautin, Turn It Up!, p. 200, 1995
- in mountain biking, a crash US
- We’ve grimaced and chuckled simultaneously at face plants [a face-first encounter with the gound], endos [an accident in which the cyclist flies over the handlebars], biffs and crash-landings. — Mountain Bike Magazine’s Complete Guide To Mountain Biking Skills, p. 32, 1996
- in pinball, a forceful hit with the flipper US
- — Bobbye Claire Natkin and Steve Kirk, All About Pinball, p. 110, 1977
- the vagina, the vulva UK
- Rayon reckons that their biffs are shaved differently. — Colin Butts, Is Harry on the Boat?, p. 91, 1997
- — Journal of Sex Research, p. 146, 2001
- a person deformed to some degree by spina bifida UK
An offensive term used by schoolchildren. - — Chris Lewis, The Dictionary of Playground Slang, p. 30, 2003
- a toilet US, 1942
- — The Guild Dictionary of Homosexual Terms, p. 4, 1965
- — Collin Baker et al., College Undergraduate Slang Study Conducted at Brown University, p. 79, 1968
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