释义 |
streak verb- to move at great speed UK, 1768
- Mercy sakes we be doin’ it to it in the left lane and we be definitely streaking. — Lanie Dills, The Official CB Slanguage Language Dictionary, p. 67, 1976
- [T]he fast-starting [Mika] Hakkinen streaked past all three into a lead that he was to keep until the Safety Car appeared towards half-distance. — Daily Telegraph, 31 July 2000
- to run naked through a crowd, especially at public events, either as a protest or out of exhibitionism US
Adapted from the sense “to go very fast”. - — John D. Bell et al., Loosely Speaking, p. 18, 1966
- — Current Slang, p. 21, Summer 1970
- — American Speech, Spring-Summer 1973
- He took to “streaking” whenever he was drunk, which was virtually every day. — Simon Napier-Bell, Black Vinyl White Powder, p. 204, 2001
|