释义 |
Hashbury nickname the Haight-Ashbury neigbourhood of San Francisco US, 1967 A blending of the two street names and an allusion to the drug-using propensities of the area’s residents.- As they say, it’s free because it’s yours. In the Hashberry they’re known as the Diggers. — The San Francisco Oracle, 1966
- Colloquial for Haight-Ashbury (hippy central in S.F.). — Ruth Bronsteen, The Hippy’s Handbook, p. 14, 1967
- Beyond the 44-block area, though, another 4,000 hippies are living in side-street pads and gravitating to “the Hashbury” when they want to make the scene. — Joe David Brown, The Hippies, p. 29, 1967
- The “Hashbury” is the capital of the hippies. — Hunter S. Thompson, The Proud Highway, p. 599, 14 May 1967: New York Times Magazine
- On the corner, a group of long-haired residents of Hashbury had surrounded a charter bus full of tourists. — L.H. Whittemore, Cop!, p. 263, 1969
- — American Speech, Winter 1982
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