释义 |
neck verb- to kiss in a lingering fashion UK, 1825
- Couples began to neck publicly. — James T. Farrell, Saturday Night, p. 50, 1947
- First Frank necked with one of the girls, then he swapped with Benny. — Irving Shulman, The Amboy Dukes, p. 29, 1947
- A couple necking on a flat bench beside the Park wall diddled a battery radio and it began to sing through its nose. — Philip Wylie, Opus 21, p. 169, 1949
- We parked down by the riverbank and necked for a couple of hours. Then she said, “My name is Pearl McBride.” — Max Shulman, The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis, p. 124, 1951
- She starts necking some bastard in the kitchen when she gets tanked up. — J.D. Salinger, Nine Stories, p. 117, 1953
- The youth cut off the motor and put his arm around the frizzy-haired girl. They started necking. — Willard Motley, Let No Man Write My Epitaph, p. 98, 1958
- We were downstairs in the cellar playroom, her parents were asleep, and we decided to turn out the lights and neck a little. — Phyllis and Eberhard Kronhausen, Sex Histories of American College Men, p. 74, 1960
- Neck a lot but don’t go to bed with him until married: June, 1954, at St. Paul’s On-the-Lake. — Elmore Leonard, Gold Coast, p. 6, 1980
- to swallow UK, 1514
- Quarter to ten and you’ve already necked a bottle. — Geoffrey Fletcher, Down Among the Meths Men, p. 18, 1966
- [N]ecking a quick cup of rosie before shooting off to Penge[.] — Greg Williams, Diamond Geezers, p. 16, 1997
- I’ve just necked half a thermos of cold coffee and my haemorrhoids are humming. — Simon Lewis, In The Box [britpulp], p. 128, 1999
- They necked a bottle of champagne and started dancing about. — Wayne Anthony, Spanish Highs, p. 82, 1999
- to drink AUSTRALIA
- He’s half immersed in lukewarm water, necking blue cocktails and beers[.] — Sun-Herald (Sunday Life), p. 6, 17 May 1998
- East is at the foot of the bed, necking a beverage, fag held between two fingers. — Mark Powell, Snap, p. 151, 2001
- in prison, to swallow a package of drugs with the intention of retrieval after excretion UK
- — Angela Devlin, Prison Patter, p. 79, 1996
- to commit suicide AUSTRALIA
- It went on and on and when I awoke after the two-hour trip he was still going, threatening to neck himself. — Paul Vautin, Turn It Up!, p. 42, 1995
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