释义 |
hay noun- a bed, either in the context of sleep or of sex US, 1903
- The difference was that the one named Al had the reputation of being great in the hay. — Norman Mailer, Advertisements for Myself, p. 392, 1950
- In the good old days, the consecrated left-wingers used to go to the Soviet Embassy, where they proved their party loyalty by getting in the hay with the men from Moscow. — Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, Washington Confidential, p. 152, 1951
- My wife says I’m a bastard, but she still likes me in the hay. — Mary McCarthy, The Group, p. 48, 1963
- We ate on the run and ran back for the hay. — Antony James, America’s Homosexual Underground, p. 115, 1965
- marijuana US, 1934
A play on GRASS- At the Mexican’s we could at least get loaded on good hay[.] — Mezz Mezzrow, Really the Blues, p. 164, 1946
- At York Avenue we goofed all day ... as we’ve been doing for 2 weeks now, laugh ... laugh ... laugh; imitated “B” movies; blasting hay; talking. — Jack Kerouac, Windblown World, p. 395, 10 January 1949
- The boys had roughed him up pretty badly bringing him in and now, what with the hay and all, he was a regular wild man. — Jim Thompson, The Killer Inside, p. 37, 1952
- Be a living doll, will you, and go in the other room and see can you contact this lad to bring up some hay? — Bernard Wolfe, The Late Risers, p. 203, 1954
- — Angela Devlin, Prison Patter, p. 61, 1996
- — Mike Haskins, Drugs, p. 287, 2003
- money AUSTRALIA, 1939
- — John Scarne, Scarne on Dice, p. 470, 1974
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