释义 |
train noun- cocaine US
- — Peter Johnson, Dictionary of Street Alcohol and Drug Terms, p. 195, 1993
- heroin UK
- — Mike Haskins, Drugs, p. 285, 2003
- in prison, drugs US
To say “the train has arrived” is to say that illegal drugs have arrived at the prison. - — Ralph de Sola, Crime Dictionary, p. 153, 1982
- a series of waves US
- — Grant W. Kuhns, On Surfing, p. 123, 1963
- multiple orgasms US
- — American Speech, p. 20, Spring 1985: “The language of singles bars”
- an act of serial sex with multiple partners US
- I knew what a train was. It was what happened when a bunch of guys got together and jammed the same girl. — Nathan McCall, Makes Me Wanna Holler, p. 42, 1994
▶ pull a train; run a train to engage in serial sex with multiple partners, homosexual or heterosexual, usually consensual US- They thought I was one of the guys who had pulled a train on their sister in the park the summer before. — Claude Brown, Manchild in the Promised Land, p. 16, 1965
- A girl who squeals on one of the outlaws or who deserts him for somebody wrong can expect to be “turned out,” as they say, to “pull the Angel train.” — Hunter S. Thompson, Hell’s Angels, p. 194, 1966
- A gang of niggers ran a train on her down on Thirty-ninth Street. — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), Trick Baby, p. 173, 1969
- You get a girl like that who wants to pull a train, you’d think of her as basically hot, right? — Lawrence Block, No Score [The Affairs of Chip Harrison Omnibus], p. 115, 1970
- Well last night they pulled a train on me. — Charles Whited, Chiodo, p. 162, 1973
- Peggy Reeves Sanday had never heard of “pulling train” until one of her students came to her office after missing class for two weeks. — The Chronicle of Higher Education, p. A3, 19 September 1990
- Once Moke and Smith let Nigger Bobo Johnson finish off the end of a train on an older girl, according to Churchy Mule. — Clarence Major, All-Night Visitors, p. 40, 1998
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