释义 |
wacky adjective odd, eccentric, crazy US, 1935- I’ll go on seeing her occasionally, for we are both wacky in a way, and we should never have gotten married[.] — Jack Kerouac, Letter to Carolina Kerouac Blake, p. 88, 14 March 1945
- The only times Benny saw him were at school, and then he’d leave with some sort of whacky excuse about looking for an apartment for his family in East Flatbrush. — Irving Shulman, The Amboy Dukes, p. 160, 1947
- The average Village night club of the whacky early days never had more than one toilet. — Robert Sylvester, No Cover Charge, p. 249, 1956
- She had a nervous breakdown and was acting so wacky she got run over by a bus. — American Graffiti, 1973
- And I am NOT going to spend hours and pages describing in mind-numbing detail each wacky new look. — James St. James, Party Monster, p. 61, 1990
- Michael Jackson [...] doing wacky stuff like living in a hyperbolic chamber. — Howard Stern, Miss America, p. 61, 1995
- A “wacky” builder, Brian Walker, is to walk from Land’s End to John o’Groats carrying a three-stone pine door–for charidee, natch. — The Guardian, p. 5, 28 May 2003
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