释义 |
stack noun- in rock music, an assemblage of loudspeakers UK
- — Simon Warner, Rockspeak!, p. 297, 1996
- in pool, the balls assembled inside the rack before a game US, 1977
- — Mike Shamos, The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Billiards, p. 230, 1993
- in pool, the clustered pack of balls left at the foot of the table after the first shot of the game US
- — Steve Rushin, Pool Cool, p. 27, 1990
- a package of marijuana cigarettes US
- — American Speech, p. 88, May 1955: “Narcotic got along the Mexican border”
- — Richard A. Spears, The Slang and Jargon of Drugs and Drink, p. 480, 1986
- — Mike Haskins, Drugs, p. 289, 2003
- one thousand dollars US
- He claims he could earn a “stack”–street slang for $1000–for his work. He claims he shot someone in a dispute at a drug house. — Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, p. 1A, 17 March 2002
- Davis is now accused of enlisting the help of others to contact Peters by phone and offering the victim “four stacks,” street slang for $4,000, to change his story of the events that led up to the shooting. — Duluth News-Tribune, 12 December 2007
- money US
- — Anna Scotti and Paul Young, Buzzwords, p. 80, 1997
- in trucking, a smokestack from the truck engine US
- — Montie Tak, Truck Talk, p. 179, 1971
- a large amount of something US, 1870
- There could be a stack of explanations for that initial deployment of the short, sharp blow. — The Guardian, 22 March 2003
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