释义 |
skinhead; skin noun- a member of a youth fashion and gang movement, characterised by close-cropped or shaven scalp and smart utilitarian wear, associated with football hooliganism, racist violence and neo-Nazism UK, 1969
Early in the 1970s Richard Allen, a pseudonym of James Moffat (1922–93), published a series of “youthsploitation” novels under the general title Skinhead. - — William D. Alsever, Glossary for the Establishment and Other Uptight People, p. 29, December 1970
- — Bournemouth Echo, 2 January 1971
- How can anyone condemn the skinhead books when, according to the letters received from countless thousand fans, the consensus of opinion is that they–and they alone–present skinheads, suedeheads, boot boys and now smooths as they really are? — Richard Allen, Author’s Notes [britpulp], p. 63, November 1972
- No skins will be served — Time Out, 13 June 1980
- What is it that provokes skins to punch, kick, nut and razor? — New Society, 26 June 1980
- Fuck facist skinhead shit. — Francesca Lia Block, Baby Be-Bop, p. 419, 1995
- 4 Skins [...] a band who espoused the street politics of the extreme right. They were made up of skinheads, the close-cropped, heavily booted British youth cult, but their name also framed an anatomical, sexual anti-Semitic pun. — Simon Warner, Rockspeak!, p. 33, 1996
- In 1969, Labour Prime Minister Harold Wilson berated some Tory rivals as “the skinheads of Surbiton”. — Martin Roach, Dr. Marten’s Air Wair, 1999
- a British Leyland “Allegro” car UK
Citizens’ band radio slang, playing on AGGRO- — Peter Chippindale, The British CB Book, p. 161, 1981
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