释义 |
wassup?; whas up?; wassuuup?
used as a greeting US A slurred “what’s up?” with dozens of variant spellings. Wildly popular pop speak in the US (and, to a degree, UK) in 2000 in response to a series of television advertisements for Budweiser beer that first aired on December 20, 1999.- Whas up, baby doll? — New Jack City, 1990
- “Wha’s up?” the guy said to Strike, not knowing exactly who Strike was either. — Richard Price, Clockers, p. 324, 1992
- — The Bell (Paducah Tilghman High School), pp. 8–9, 17 December 1993: “Tilghmanism: the concealed language of the hallway”
- YOU: Wassup, baby? HER (SHAKING THE [PORNOGRAPHIC VIDEO] TAPE, SCREAMING): Is this what you like? Is this what the fuck you like? — Chris Rock, Rock This!, p. 166, 1997
- Binch insisted on wandering up and down the queue bellowing “Wassuuup?” and blowing a party screecher in people’s faces. — The Guardian, 28 December 2000
- — Julian Johnson, Urban Survival, p. 258, 2003
|