释义 |
stack verb- to crash a vehicle AUSTRALIA
- He had lost his way. Stacked his Harley Davidson. — Jack Hibberd, A Stretch of the Imagination, p. 8, 1971
- to earn a lot of money US
- — Vann Wesson, Generation X Field Guide and Lexicon, p. 160, 1997
- to put away, to save US
- What does a fifteen-year-old do with that kind of money? “Spend it. And stack it.” — Leon Bing, Do or Die, p. 32, 1991
▶ stack on a blue to begin a fight AUSTRALIA, 1944- Now yer might listen t’ some sense f’ a change ’n stack on a real blue. — Bob Jewson, Stir, p. 62, 1980
▶ stack on a turn to kick up a fuss AUSTRALIA- That’s when you discovered us. Stacked on a turn. Went the knuckle. Dorabella shot through, abandoning her white bloomers on a low bough. — Jack Hibberd, A Stretch of the Imagination, p. 15, 1971
- If God stacks on a turn, what can we do? — Kel Richards, The Aussie Bible, p. 20, 2003
▶ stack on an act to kick up a fuss AUSTRALIA- But he’s stacking on a great act about maintaining the Predictor. — John Wynnum, Tar Dust, p. 78, 1962
- — John Wynnum, Jiggin’ in the Riggin’, p. 54, 1965
- — Jim Ramsay, Cop It Sweet!, p. 85, 1977
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