释义 |
stool verb- to give information or evidence, usually to the police US, 1911
- If the other rats in this business would let me alone and quit stoolin’ to the cops I’d get along. — William J. Spillard and Pence James, Needle in a Haystack, p. 192, 1945
- She’s that nun who stools for them two darky dicks, ain’t she? — Chester Himes, A Rage in Harlem, p. 150, 1957
- “Arnie stooled on the fellows who were with him in the holdup.” — Charles Perry, Portrait of a Young Man Drowning, p. 241, 1962
- [A]lmost every day in New York City a junkie dies of an overdose, some sold intentionally by pushers who think the addict has been “stooling” to detectives. — James Mills, The Panic in Needle Park, p. 39, 1966
- That’s the problem. Nobody wants to stool on a brother officer. — Edwin Torres, Q & A, p. 138, 1977
- to inform on US, 1911
- If the other rats in this business would let me alone and quit stoolin’ to the cops I’d get along. — William J. Spillard and Pence James, Needle in a Haystack, p. 192, 1945
- She’s that nun who stools for them two darky dicks, ain’t she? — Chester Himes, A Rage in Harlem, p. 150, 1957
- Here’s a rat who stooled on his former policy racketeer bosses. — Chester Himes, Cotton Comes to Harlem, p. 15, 1965
- [A]lmost every day in New York City a junkie dies of an overdose, some sold intentionally by pushers who think the addict has been “stooling” to detectives. — James Mills, The Panic in Needle Park, p. 39, 1966
- That’s the problem. Nobody wants to stool on a brother officer. — Edwin Torres, Q & A, p. 138, 1977
|