释义 |
bleep
used as a euphemistic replacement for an expletive, regardless of part of speech US, 1968- You could hardly hear Columnist Sheilah Graham for the “bleeps” on KPIX’s “Hot Line” Wednesday morning. Once she started discussing “Portnoy’s Compalint,” it was bleepers’ creepers all the way. — San Francisco Chronicle, p. 29, 7 March 1969
- When you’re having trouble stopping them and you’re not moving the ball, it’s going to be a bleeping long day. [Quoting John Madden] — San Francisco Chronicle, p. 44, 4 September 1972
- — American Speech, Fall-Winter 1976
- “I’m a bleep,” Howard said, “because if you say what I think you’re going to say, that’s the way it’ll come out.” — Elmore Leonard, Touch, p. 220, 1977
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