释义 |
stone noun- a diamond or other precious stone SOUTH AFRICA, 1884
- The safe contained a dozen small sacks of stones and maybe a dozen trays. — Red Rudensky, The Gonif, p. 82, 1970
- EDDIE: You two take a car each, I’ll follow ya. You ditch it, I’ll pick you up, then we’ll pick up the stones. — Reservoir Dogs, 1992
- an Opel car UK
Citizens’ band radio slang; pun on “opal”. - — Peter Chippindale, The British CB Book, p. 161, 1981
- crack cocaine; a piece of crack cocaine UK
A recurring rock metaphor. - — Angela Devlin, Prison Patter, p. 110, 1996
- Crack is also known as PEBBLES, SCUD, WASH, STONE and ROCK[.] — Macfarlane, Macfarlane and Robson, The User, p. 112, 1996
- [S]he looked pretty good, turning herself on with that stone. — Lanre Fehintola, Charlie Says ..., p. 33, 2000
- — Nick Constable, This is Cocaine, p. 182, 2002
- — Mike Haskins, Drugs, p. 282, 2003
- We got Rocks, we got Bones, we got Brown, we got Stones. — Julian Johnson, Urban Survival, p. 170, 2003
- a state of drug intoxication US
- When we got to the concert, I had a strong stone on. — Stephen Gaskin, Amazing Dope Tales, p. 155, 1980
- a billiard ball US
- — Steve Rushin, Pool Cool, p. 28, 1990
- in motorcycle racing, a very slow racer US
- — John Lawlor, How to Talk Car, p. 101, 1965
- in the usage of youthful model road racers (slot car racers), a slow car US
- — Phantom Surfers, The Exciting Sounds of Model Road Racing (Album cover), 1997
- a dollar US
- “I’ll make at least seventy-five stones every week.” — Herbert Simmons, Corner Boy, p. 152, 1957
- “Did you get any loot?” “About twenty stones.” — Malcom Braly, Felony Tank, p. 120, 1961
|