释义 |
OD verb to overdose, to take an excessive dose of a drug, usually heroin US- Frankie’s OD’ing up in Marcie’s room in the Reynolds. He needs help bad, honey. — James Mills, The Panic in Needle Park, p. 37, 1966
- When Janis Joplin O.D.’d one Sunday at the Landmark Motel, John Carpenter wrote a piece for the L.A. Free Press which clung pretty much to the theory, “What else is a Janis Joplin going to do on a Sunday afternoon alone in L.A.?” — Eve Babitz, Eve’s Hollywood, p. 250, 1974
- He OD’d four times on barks (barbs, barbiturates) and four times the medics saved him. — Paul E. Willis, Profane Culture, p. 184, 1978
- I couldn’t get hung up with her at that point, going over each time she called and shooting her up, having her collapse, with doubt in mind about whether she had O.D.’d or not. — Herbert Huncke, The Evening Sun Turned Crimson, p. 176, 1980
- Charlie Bat probably OD’d in the same corner where I slept. — Francesca Lia Block, Missing Angel Juan, p. 291, 1993
- LANCE: The day I bring an O.D.ing bitch to your place, then I gotta give her the shot. — Pulp Fiction, 1994
- Most of her favorite singers have o.d.’d anyway. — Francesca Lia Block, I Was a Teenage Fairy, p. 146, 1998
- Claims on the net that he’d ODed in his hotel room and the record company had hidden his body[.] — John Williams, Cardiff Dead, p. 50, 2000
- Elvis had ODed on being Elvis. — Mick Farren, Give the Anarchist a Cigarette, p. 393, 2001
|