释义 |
mash verb- to beat up, to “beat to a pulp” US, 1872
Derives from conventional “mash” (to crush, smash utterly). - I mash his fuckin’ nose. Fuckin’ joker. Mash it good I’m thinkin’. — Nick Barlay, Curvy Lovebox, p. 10, 1997
- [of a combat-based arcade game] I got fucking mashed, man, and now I ain’t got no more money. — Melanie McGrath, Hard, Soft & Wet, p. 50, 1998
- Some mad fellas came round and mashed us without green-lighting with yourself, Johnny. — Kevin Sampson, Outlaws, p. 76, 2001
- to flirt aggressively US, 1877
- We’re liable to get pinched for mashing on Sixty-third. I heard the Law is watching that pretty close. — James T. Farrell, Saturday Night, p. 38, 1947
- to go away TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO, 1956
Usually used as a command to dogs. - — Lise Winer, Dictionary of the English/Creole of Trinidad & Tobago, 2003
- to pass, to hand to someone, to give US, 1944
- — Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, New York Confidential, 1948: “A glossary of Harlemisms”
- — Joseph E. Ragen and Charles Finston, Inside the World’s Toughest Prison, p. 808, 1962: “Penitentiary and underworld glossary”
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