释义 |
D noun- LSD US, 1971
- — Richard A. Spears, The Slang and Jargon of Drugs and Drink, p. 134, 1986
- — Mike Haskins, Drugs, p. 285, 2003
- Dilaudid, a synthetic opiate US, 1954
- All right, we was just gonna shoot this little bitty bottle of D. — Bruce Jackson, In the Life, p. 220, 1972
- — William K. Bentley and James M. Corbett, Prison Slang, p. 65, 1992
- narcotics US
- — John R. Armore and Joseph D. Wolfe, Dictionary of Desperation, p. 26, 1976
- used as a term of address, young man to young man US
An abbreviation of DUDE. - Look out, dude, no reason to be rude, dude, I’m just asking, d. When you get out and about? — Joel Rose, Kill Kill Faster Faster, p. 59, 1997
- a police detective US, 2005
- The waterfront D’s were always searching his gladstone bag, but they never caught him. — Frank Hardy, The Yarns of Billy Borker, p. 130, 1965
- Milo briefed one of the D’s very quickly, then came over to where I sat, just outside the tape. — Jonathan Kellerman, Rage, p. 487, 2005
- a (pre-decimalisation, 1971) penny UK, 1387
From Latin denarius, a rough equivalent of an old penny used in the standard abbreviation for pre-decimal Sterling: £1sd. - in poker, the fourth player to the left of the dealer US
- — George Percy, The Language of Poker, p. 26, 1988
- a demilitarised zone US
A shortening of DMZ, the official abbreviation. - — Linda Reinberg, In the Field, p. 56, 1991
- a member of the Disciples youth gang AUSTRALIA, 1882
- “Nah, ain’t no D shot me. My old-lady cousin did it.” — L.H. Whittemore, Cop!, p. 180, 1969
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