释义 |
dude noun- a regular fellow US, 1883
In the US, the term had this vague sense in the hippie culture, and then a much more specific sense in the 1970s and 80s. - GEORGE: A dude? What does he mean, “dude”? Dude ranch?’ BILLY: A dude. WYATT: No, no. Dude means–uh–a nice guy, you know. Dude means a regular sort of person. — Peter Fonda, Easy Rider, p. 110, 1969
- “Hey man. You see these dudes right here? They were sitting out there hiding the wine bottle.” — Bobby Seale, Seize the Time, p. 42, 1970
- During our stay we had all the white clientele coming from downtown and all the down black dudes and chicks too. — Babs Gonzales, Movin’ On Down De Line, p. 9, 1975
- Look at the card, dude. — Bret Easton Ellis, Less Than Zero, p. 14, 1985
- One night while I was visiting with Frankie there was a massive dude named Sol there who I eventually got to know and work with. — Herbert Huncke, Guilty of Everything, p. 113, 1990
- I imagine the rest of the band and it is one heavenly combo–Jimi and Jim and John and Bob and Elvis–all the dudes you are into. — Francesca Lia Block, Missing Angel Juan, p. 277, 1993
- Who is this fucking dude? — Mark Powell, Snap, p. 148, 2001
- used as a term of address, originally young male to young male, but currently without regard to sex US, 1945
- “Hey, dude,” an older voice called out. — John Clellon Holmes, The Horn, p. 162, 1958
- With the nuances of pronunciation, dudes who said “dude” had no problem communicating. Pronounced “Duuhuhude” it meant “Right on, I’m into it if you are[.]” — Nina Blake, Retrohell, p. 120, 1997
- She’s a mermaid, dude. — American Pie, 1999
- Dude (to a female), it’s moshing all over. — Juno, 2007
- a railway conductor US
- — Norman Carlisle, The Modern Wonder Book of Trains and Railroading, p. 262, 1946
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