释义 |
off verb- To kill US
- I hoped he wouldn’t bring his snitchfriend with him, because that meant I’d have to off both of them. — Clarence Cooper Jr., The Farm, p. 236, 1967
- Off the Pig means to kill the slave master. It doesn’t mean commit murder. — Bobby Seale, Seize the Time, p. 404, 1970
- They run around all the time saying: “Off the pigs”. — George V. Higgins, The Friends of Eddie Doyle, p. 66, 1971
- I mean, offin’ somebody might be necessary too. — Odie Hawkins, Ghetto Sketches, p. 15, 1972
- [A] lot of the fay chicks would go for his revolutionary bullshit, and if that was the program I’d come on with “right on” and “off the pig” good as Reggie. — Edwin Torres, Carlito’s Way, p. 81, 1975
- Out on the turb folks are wondering who it was got the spic jealous enough to try offing a dude, you know how it is. — Robert Deane Pharr, Giveadamn Brown, p. 14, 1978
- Nah, he didn’t set it. Somebody offed him. — Body Heat, 1980
- There’s come all over the sheets–he got off before he got offed. — Basic Instinct, 1992
- As soon as his car came to a halt, man, he just put the gun to his head and blammo! Offed himself, man, blew himself away right there. — Slacker, 1992
- Considering how low your self-esteem has got to get before you con-sider offing yourself[.] — Christopher Brookmyre, Not the End of the World, p. 257, 1998
- to sell, especially contraband US, 1960
- “Maybe he’s got something we can off. A watch, maybe?” — Malcolm Braly, It’s Cold Out There, p. 69, 1966
- “I’ll just off ’em to the guy down on Canal Street.” — Joseph Pistone, Donnie Brasco, p. 76, 1987
- “You should be able to off the chips at face value, right?” Sands said. — Gerald Petievich, Shakedown, p. 148, 1988
- The Indians [Colombians] have so much coke they can’t off [sell] it without finding new markets. — Terry Williams, The Cocaine Kids, p. 22, 1989
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