释义 |
heel verb to leave without paying a bill US, 1966- “You’re still here. I told you to heel.” — Charles Perry, Portrait of a Young Man Drowning, p. 325, 1962
- We managed to heel that motel before they could give us the bill. — American Speech, p. 281, December 1966: “More Carnie Talk from the West Coast”
- — Joe McKennon, Circus Lingo, p. 46, 1980
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