释义 |
shotgun noun- a pipe with air-holes used for smoking marijuana US, 1977
The shotgun gives a BLAST- The shotgun was a tube of seven Coca-Cola cans taped together end-to-end. Grass, bulk marijuana which could be purchased by the sandbag for ten dollars MPC, was burned in the second can. — John Del Vecchio, The 13 Valley, p. 132, 1982
- a ritual of drinking beer, forcing the beer out of the can into the drinker’s mouth by opening the down-facing top after puncturing the up-facing bottom US, 1988
- — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, p. 9, Fall 1988
- a potent mix of heroin, cocaine, nitroglycerine, phenol and kola nut administered to racehorses as a stimulant US
- [T]he trainer gave all his horses a “shotgun” when they went to post. — Harry J. Anslinger, The Murderers, p. 227, 1961
- the front passenger seat in a car US, 1963
Also called the “shotgun seat”. The earliest use of the term, not yet applied to a car, seems to be in the 1939 film Stagecoach. To date, the earliest discovered use in the sense of a car is in 1963. - He got up and staggered to the shotgun seat and tossed me the keys[.] — Robert Gover, Poorboy at the Party, p. 180, 1966
- CARLOS: Shotgun! ANTS: No, I called it. BEAN: When? ANTS: Before we picked you up. BEAN: Man, you can’t call it for the whole night. I got it now. Get in the back, punk. — American Graffiti, 1973
- Strike started to walk away, thinking about flex, when the rust-colored Caddy came rolling up again, Rodney at the wheel with his arm flung out along the back of the shotgun seat. — Richard Price, Clockers, p. 17, 1992
- a male passenger in a vehicle equipped with citizens’ band radio UK
- — Peter Chippindale, The British CB Book, p. 159, 1981
- a police radar unit US
- How about it 1–40, we definitely got a bear with a shot gun at Exit 31. — Lanie Dills, The Official CB Slanguage Language Dictionary, p. 62, 1976
- in blackjack, the player to the immediate left of the dealer US, 1979
- — Thomas L. Clark, The Dictionary of Gambling and Gaming, p. 199, 1987
- in electric line work, an insulated line tool formally known as a grip-all stick US
- — A.B. Chance Co., Lineman’s Slang Dictionary, p. 15, 1980
- an unannounced test US
- — Collin Baker et al., College Undergraduate Slang Study Conducted at Brown University, p. 196, 1968
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