释义 |
blag verb- to hoax or deceive someone; to bluff someone; to persuade someone; to wheedle something; to scrounge something UK
From French blaguer (to joke), possibly informed by conventional English “blaggard”. - This time I went the guntz (the whole way) and blag[g]ed her for a grand (£1,000) — Frank Norman, Bang To Rights, p. 113, 1958
- — Bob Young and Micky Moody, The Language of Rock ‘n’ Roll, p. 17, 1985
- Are we gonna go and blag some whizz [amphetamine] or what? — Ben Graham, Weekday Service (Disco Biscuits), p. 163, 1996
- I’ve always told him it’s Tom we’re bringing in, always blagged it that it’s only a little VAT sting. — Kevin Sampson, Outlaws, p. 100, 2001
- Blag. Use your bloody gob. — Chris Ryan, The Watchman, p. 2, 2001
- In one programme [Donna Air] blags a limo for herself for a day. — The Face, p. 14, June 2001
- to successfully persuade another person into having sex with you UK
- — Paul Baker, Polari, p. 165, 2002
- to rob something, especially with violence UK, 1933
- — Angela Devlin, Prison Patter, p. 28, 1996
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