释义 |
crusty noun a young person who many years later embraces the counterculture values of the late 1960s UK, 1990- Next in the queue was a clump of crusties. They were standing so close to each other that it looked as though their dreads had all velcroed together. — Linda Jaivin, Rock n Roll Babes from Outer Space, p. 166, 1996
- It’s wet but the festival is up and running and the counter culture is at play: crusties, rastas, schoolies, hippies, freaks, straights, dopers, acid-heads, nightclubbers and parents and kids are all in for the long haul together. — Sun-Herald, p. 121, 7 January 1996
- — Vann Wesson, Generation X Field Guide and Lexicon, p. 42, 1997
- Crusties are notorious for not believing in baths and synthetic inventions such as deodorant and shampoo–hence their name. Instead they prefer growing dreadlocks and tying dogs on pieces of string. — Ben Osborne, The A–Z of Club Culture, p. 61, 1999
- [He] had turned Crusty and gone to live in an old gypsy caravan by the side of the road in the middle of nowhere. — Pete McCarthy, McCarthy’s Bar, p. 19, 2000
- ‘[A] good-looking posh young trustafarian juggling crustyboy she’d met at some Arts Festival[.] — James Hawes, Dead Long Enough, p. 34, 2000
- Roy had his flat turned over last week like an I’m fuckin sure it was one-a those crusties, fuckin sure of it, mun. — Niall Griffiths, Sheepshagger, p. 162, 2001
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