释义 |
strawberry noun- a woman who trades sex for crack cocaine US
- — Geoffrey Froner, Digging for Diamonds, p. 59, 1989
- They would only say that they were investigating a series of crimes that involved women who traded sex for drugs. Since August, 1985, at least nine such women, known in street slang as “strawberries,” have been found shot to death. — Los Angeles Times, p. 3, 24 February 1989
- The woman that answers is thin and emaciated, a crack addict, pipe in hand an all. This is SHERYL, a strawberry. — Boyz N The Hood, p. 48, 1990
- — Judi Sanders, Kickin’ like Chicken with the Couch Commander, p. 23, 1992
- — Mark S. Fleisher, Beggars & Thieves, p. 291, 1995: “Glossary”
- The “strawberries” or rock whores, who worked farther east on the boulevard, would blow a guy in a doorway just for a taste of rock cocaine. — Joseph Wambaugh, Floaters, p. 39, 1996
- [In downtown Los Angeles] Some of the local beer bars have prostitutes known as strawberries. Strawberries are anybody’s for a helping of rock cocaine which (in 1994) is worth 4 or 5 dollars. — Fiona Pitt-Kethley, Red Light Districts of the World, p. 85, 2000
- the female nipple US
Usually in the plural. - — Maledicta, p. 132, Summer/Winter 1982: “Dyke diction”: the language of lesbians
- a tablet of mescaline US, 1971
From the colour of the tablet. - — Richard A. Spears, The Slang and Jargon of Drugs and Drink, p. 488, 1986
- — Mike Haskins, Drugs, p. 283, 2003
- a bruise or scrape CANADA, 1921
- — American Speech, pp. 158–160, May 1959: “Smokejumping words”
- Tommy Harper has a pulled thigh muscle and a bad sliding strawberry. — Jim Bouton, Ball Four, p. 244, 1970
- — Judi Sanders, Mashing and Munching in Ames, p. 19, 1994
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