释义 |
rabbit and pork; rabbit verb to talk UK, 1941 Rhyming slang. “To rabbit on” is “to talk at length”.- Bri and he are rabbitin’ away about the biz they done[.] — Derek Raymond (Robin Cook), The Crust on Its Uppers, p. 53, 1962
- She was a peculiar chick. English and well spoken and yet she rabbited on endlessly about pop music and worked as a go-go dancer. — Kevin Mackey, The Cure, p. 27, 1970
- [I]t will give something to rabbit to the trouble [wife] about[.] — Ronnie Barker, Fletcher’s Book of Rhyming Slang, p. 4, 1979
- But how was I to know you’d bend my ear’oles too, with your incessant talking, you’re becoming a pest. / Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit, etc[.] — Chas ‘n’ Dave, Rabbit, 1980
- He’s been rabbiting on lately at the pub about his old Leyland bus having personality and intelligence. — Roy Slaven (John Doyle), Five South Coast Seasons, p. 22, 1992
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