释义 |
pack noun- a package of illegal drugs, especially heroin US, 1952
Also variant “packet“. - — Richard Horman and Allan Fox, Drug Awareness, 1970
- I been feeling boogy ever since this morning. I didn’t do but a five-dollar pack when I woke up. — Donald Goines, Dopefiend, p. 97, 1971
- — Robert Ashtom, This is Heroin, 2002
- marijuana UK
- — Mike Haskins, Drugs, p. 288, 2003
- in the used car business, a fixed amount that is added to the price the dealer has paid for the car US
- The pack is used to pay for overheads and other expenses. — Peter Mann, How to Buy a Used Car Without Getting Gypped, p. 194, 1975
▶ go to the pack to deteriorate AUSTRALIA, 1919- pack, to go to the –To fall away; to collapse. — Gilbert H. Lawson, A Dictionary of Australian Words and Terms, 1924
- They all wanted exemptions, and one after another comes up and tells the bloke in charge how everything’ll go to the pack unless they’re let go home again. — Kylie Tennant, Lost Haven, p. 248, 1946
- — Arthur Chipper, The Aussie Swearer’s Guide, p. 78, 1972
- — Jim Ramsay, Cop It Sweet!, p. 68, 1977
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