释义 |
Jap noun- a Japanese person US, 1854 Derogatory.
- Jack, the guy who said he’d give his right arm for a friend and did when he stopped a bastard of a Jap from slitting me in two. — Mickey Spillane, I, The Jury, p. 5, 1947
- But then came the influx of Japs from the West Coast states. — Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, New York Confidential, pp. 77–78, 1948
- I wished I were a Denver Mexican, or even a poor overworked Jap, anything but what I was[.] — Jack Kerouac, On the Road, p. 180, 1957
- Do not use to describe a Japanese person or Japanese-American. — Multicultural Management Program Fellows, Dictionary of Cautionary Words and Phrases, 1989
- And I even liked the Japs. Whenever you waved to them they’d bow a little bit. — Joseph Wambaugh, Floaters, p. 98, 1996
- Japs, Yanks, Krauts, Aussies–you name it, we robbed them. — Kevin Sampson, Outlaws, p. 7, 2001
- someone who attacks from behind and/or without warning US
- But if you’re a Jap or a turkey or you’re going to punk out it’s going to be bad stuff for you. — Hal Ellson, Duke, p. 31, 1949
- an unannounced test US, 1967
- — Collin Baker et al., College Undergraduate Slang Study Conducted at Brown University, p. 144, 1968
- an attack from behind and/or without warning US
- Second kind is a “Jap”. That’s when a group of guys, two guys or three guys, go down in a different club’s territory, get in fast, beat up one or two guys and get out. — Lewis Yablonsky, The Violent Gang, p. 78, 1962
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