释义 |
pull noun- in policing, an act of temporarily detaining a suspicious person or vehicle for investigation UK, 1977
Derived from PULL (to arrest). - a woman as a sex object UK
- — Bob Young and Micky Moody, The Language of Rock ‘n’ Roll, p. 113, 1985
- an inhalation of smoke from a cigarette or pipe US
- “What are you doing?” I asked him when he was still holding onto the blunt after two or three pulls. — Earl “DMX” Simmons, E.A.R.L., p. 205, 2002
▶ on the pull engaged in a casual or recreational quest for a sexual partner UK- The score [of Verdi’s “A Masked Ball” indicates that the royal Gustavus visits the seer disguised as a fisherman, or pescator, but [director, Calixto] Bieto has teased out the slang meaning of the Italian word, which translates loosely as “someone out on the pull". — The Guardian, 21 February 2002
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