释义 |
stacked adjective- possessing large breasts US, 1942
Sometimes intensified with phrases such as “stone to the bone” or rhymed as in “stacked and packed” (the name of a photographic calendar produced by former Nixon operative G. Gordon Liddy, featuring nearly naked women holding guns). - Individually they were all interested in dating a girl who was attractive and stacked up like a million[.] — Irving Shulman, The Amboy Dukes, p. 207, 1947
- She was stacked. She was pretty. — Jim Thompson, Savage Night, p. 74, 1953
- Harry gave the blonde a seven, but you only gave her a six because you didn’t think she was stacked enough for a seven. — Max Shulman, Guided Tour of Campus Humor, p. 161, 1955
- Well stacked too. Nice behind. — Willard Motely, Let No Man Write My Epitaph, p. 297, 1958
- For a non-white, I mean, she was, as they say, ha ha, stacked! — Robert Gover, One Hundred Dollar Misunderstanding, p. 29, 1961
- “If you were good-looking or stacked or something, I would,” I retaliated. — John Nichols, The Sterile Cuckoo, p. 82, 1965
- She was a pretty, well-stacked girl, with black hair and a white softness which set her hair off pretty cool. — Piri Thomas, Down These Mean Streets, p. 83, 1967
- Toe’s lady, a half something and half something else, with eyes like a cat’s and stacked stone to the bone wandered through, fluffing up the pillows on the sofa across from them. — Odie Hawkins, Chicago Hustle, p. 152, 1977
- I like women who are aggressive. And stacked. — Anka Radakovich, The Wild Girls Club, p. 202, 1994
- muscular US, 2002
- — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, p. 10, October 2002
- used of prison sentences, consecutive, not concurrent US
- — Ethan Hilderbrant, Prison Slang, p. 121, 1998
- well-provided; wealthy UK
- Everybody was stacked up on pills[.] — Simon Napier-Bell, Black Vinyl White Powder, p. 179, 2001
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