释义 |
punk noun- a fan of punk rock music and the associated fashions UK
- — Television Personalities, Part Time Punks, 1976
- a young and/or weak man used as a passive homosexual partner, especially in prison US, 1904
- A punk, if you want it in plain English, is a boy with smooth skin who takes the place of a woman in a jailbird’s love life. — Mezz Mezzrow, Really the Blues, p. 15, 1946
- Punks and brats are those prisoners who take the passive role in sodomy; there is no chronological age limit. — Arthur V. Huffman, New York Mattachine Newsletter, p. 6, June 1961
- The hacks would hear about it and they would put Tico on A-1 tier where all the faggots were, and he’d be a jailhouse punk. — Piri Thomas, Down These Mean Streets, p. 266, 1967
- — John A. Holm, Dictionary of Bahamian English, p. 162, 1982
- [D]redge out the best-looking punk you got in this moth-eaten bazaar. — William Burroughs, Queer, p. 71, 1985
- Four years fuckin’ punks in the ass made you appreciate rib when you get it. — Reservoir Dogs, 1992
- Awww c’mon, Bop, let’s stop calling lesbians bulldaggers and homo-sexuals fags and punks. — Odie Hawkins, Midnight, p. 160, 1995
- a child US
- — Gene Sorrows, All About Carnivals, p. 24, 1985: “Terminology”
- a lesbian BAHAMAS
- — John A. Holm, Dictionary of Bahamian English, p. 152, 1982
- in horse racing, a mildly talented jockey US
- — David W. Maurer, Argot of the Racetrack, p. 53, 1951
- marijuana UK
- Got the Skunk, got the Punk, we got the Sess, it’s Blessed. — Julian Johnson, Urban Survival, p. 170, 2003
- the middle position in the back seat of a car US
- — Edith A. Folb, runnin’ down some lines, p. 251, 1980
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