释义 |
dynamite noun- powerful alcohol or drugs US, 1919
- Even if it’s only one stick of dynamite this boy is always a sly cat. — Hal Ellson, Duke, p. 27, 1949
- “That was dynamite you gave me the other night, Luke,” she murmured[.] — George Mandel, Flee the Angry Strangers, p. 120, 1952
- The good stuff, in its round cylinders of cigarettes, he stacked in one pile: dynamites. — Willard Motley, Let No Man Write My Epitaph, p. 107, 1958
- If you were nice to Tony, he was nice to you; he came up with dynamite when you were nice to him. — Clarence Cooper Jr, The Scene, p. 67, 1960
- When the two men allegedly introduced the drug into the Bay Area a short time ago, the addicts spread the word that some “real dynamite” was available, said O’Connor. — San Francisco Examiner, p. 17, 22 April 1962
- Not just any connection, but a connection who deals good quality stuff–“dynamite,” not “garbage.” — James Mills, The Panic in Needle Park, p. 15, 1966
- We copped off that stud from New Yawk who came over with that dynamite every now and then. — Nathan Heard, Howard Street, p. 161, 1968
- “We ain’t got no bigger thang goin’ on than you ’n Zelma,” he replied finally, sprawling back on the bed, the first effects of the dynamite seeping in. — Odie Hawkins, Chicago Hustle, p. 33, 1977
- [I]f we don’t take charge of this gizmo for making dynamite out of low-grade shit, you won’t be tops no more if somebody else gets hands on it. — Robert Deane Pharr, Giveadamn Brown, p. 208, 1978
- I asked if she could help me cop and she said she had some shit–$3.50 bags–not dynamite, but decent. — Herbert Huncke, The Evening Sun Turned Crimson, p. 161, 1980
- nitroglycerine tablets prescribed to cardiac patients US
- — John Gould, Maine Lingo, p. 84, 1975
- any amphetamine, methamphetamine or other central nervous system stimulant US
- — National Institute on Drug Abuse, What do they call it again?, 1980
- cocaine US
- — J.E. Schmindt, Narcotics Lingo and Lore, p. 54, 1959
- a blend of heroin and cocaine US, 1937
- Addicts sometimes blend heroin and cocaine in a mixture called dynamite. — Harry J. Anslinger, The Murderers, p. 271, 1961
- — Robert Ashton, This Is Heroin, p. 208, 2002
- something that is very good US, 1902
- Dynamnite, baby, but get your paws out of my pockets. — Richard Farina, Been Down So Long, p. 119, 1966
- This grass is DYNAMITE. — Doug Lang, Freaks, p. 109, 1973
- in an illegal betting operation, money that one bookmaker bets with another bookmaker to cover bets that he does not want to hold US
- — David W. Maurer, Argot of the Racetrack, p. 25, 1951
- a fight UK
Rhyming slang. May be abbreviated to “dyna”. - — Ray Puxley, Cockney Rabbit, 1992
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