释义 |
stash noun- a hidden supply of drugs, usually marijuana; the hiding place itself US, 1942
- Where is it? Where’s your stash, knucklehead? — Alexander Trocchi, Cain’s Book, p. 106, 1960
- I stopped at the broom-closet stash. I hurled the “sizzle” [drugs] into the corner on the shelf. — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), Pimp, p. 155, 1969
- Lady was tipping this broad 20 a day and soon as she found her stash, she ran and told whitey. — Babs Gonzales, Movin’ On Down De Line, p. 51, 1975
- He didn’t shoot me, because I had a stash like you wouldn’t believe. — Apocalypse Now, 1979
- The stock or “stash” of cocaine is kept in a bag stitched with beads worn by adherents of Santeria[.] — Terry Williams, The Cocaine Kids, p. 28, 1989
- SAFFRON[:] I hid your stash. EDINA[:] Where? SAFFRON[:] Down the toilet. — Jennifer Saunders, Absolutely Fabulous, p. 58, 1992
- Any other time he would have been riled about losing the stash and the money[.] — Donald Gorgon, Cop Killer, p. 3, 1994
- Roy’s taken a small sample out of the main stash and he chops two fat lines [of cocaine] out on the mirror. — J.J. Connolly, Know Your Enemy [britpulp], p. 141, 1999
- in the illegal production of alcohol, a cache of alcohol US
- We got ninety gallon left in the stash. — David W. Maurer, Kentucky Moonshine, p. 125, 1974
- ill-gotten or illicit goods kept in a hidden store UK, 1914
- — Angela Devlin, Prison Patter, p. 109, 1996
- a person’s hiding place US, 1927
- If he wasn’t home or in his stash, people would say, “Tell that nigger don’t come on the street any more until he’s got my money.” — Claude Brown, Manchild in the Promised Land, p. 214, 1965
- a room, apartment or house US
- No Hotel Ritz for us this time; our stash was over some kind of feed store[.] — Mezz Mezzrow, Really the Blues, p. 132, 1946
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