释义 |
OJ noun- marijuana US, 1970
Possibly, an initialism of “oint-jay” (JOINT). - — Richard A. Spears, The Slang and Jargon of Drugs and Drink, p. 366, 1986
- Mike Haskins, Drugs, p. 288, 2003
- a marijuana cigarette dipped in liquid opium or heroin US
In other words, an “opium joint”. Popular with US troops in Vietnam. - — William D. Alsever, Glossary for the Establishment and Other Uptight People, p. 23, December 1970
- The O-Js were thin, perfectly rolled marijuana cigarettes soaked in an opium solution. Fifty O-Js to a deck. — John Del Vecchio, The 13 Valley, p. 31, 1982
- The model for usage of the OJ (opium joint–heroin loaded ciga-rette) was that of the social group use of marijuana at home. [Referring to the war in Vietnam] — David H. Marlowe, Psychological and Psychosocial Consequences of Combat and Deployment, p. 93, 2001
- Opium and marijuana rolled into a cigarette is sometimes called an OJ, which is short for “Opium Joint.” — Debra Moraes, The Little Book of Opium, p. 19, 2003
- an online jockey who hosts Internet discussions UK
Initialism, on the model of DJ (disc jockey). - Not a Simpson, not even a soft drink, but the latest in talk show hosts. — David Rowan, A Glossary for the 90s, p. 123, 1998
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