释义 |
C'S noun- combat rations, the standard meals eaten by US troops in the field, consisting of an individual ration of packaged precooked foods that can be eaten hot or cold US, 1976
- We carried two kinds of hot rations: C’s and long-range rations. — Martin Russ, Happy Hunting Ground, p. 210, 1968
- First thing that morning the Anachronism drew a case of C’s for each of us — William Pelfrey, The Big V, p. 29, 1972
- Have your people shaved by noon tomorrow and tell them to eat up all their Cs–we gotta pallet coming in the morning. — Charles Anderson, The Grunts, p. 90, 1976
- “You hungry any?” “Inna sorta gen’ral way, yeah. You mean C’s?” — Larry Heinemann, Close Quarters, p. 142, 1977
- — Linda Reinberg, In the Field, p. 32, 1991
- food US
An abbreviation of “calories;” “to get your c’s” is “to eat;.” - — Collin Baker et al., College Undergraduate Slang Study Conducted at Brown University, p. 93, 1968
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