释义 |
rack up verb- to accumulate things; to score points US, 1961
- She could of racked up points on that one. — Diner, 1982
- in a casino or gambling establishment, to have your chips placed in a chip rack to be cashed in US
- — David M. Hayano, Poker Faces, p. 187, 1982
- to prepare lines of cocaine UK
- He pushes a little bag of kuf over the desk an’ Kingsley starts rackin’ up lines on his mirror. — Nick Barlay, Curvy Lovebox, p. 59, 1997
- in prison, to return prisoners to their cells US
- — Charles Shafer, Folk Speech in Texas Prisons, p. 212, 1990
- to inform, to bring up to date US
- “I’m just trying to get you racked up to the present.” — Irving Shulman, The Short End of the Stick, p. 107, 1959
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