释义 |
slam verb- to inject an illegal drug intravenously US
- Blaze watched Dawn pulling up the sleeves of the red polyester blouse, examining the tracks where she slammed her speedballs, a mixture of powdered cocaine and Mexican tar heroin. — Joseph Wambaugh, Floaters, p. 7, 1996
- to violently jar a mix of alcoholic spirit (usually a shot of tequila) and carbonated soft drink UK
To prepare a SLAMMER - The Method: Slam it with 7-Up [branded soft drink] or via the salt’n’lemon shot ritual — Sky Magazine, p. 89, May 2001
- to hide prison contraband in your rectum US
- Like prisoners everywhere, Rikers inmates use their rectums as a sort of suitcase for weapons, concealing one or two razor blades–or sometimes even 20 or 30–by “slamming” or “boofing” them. — Village Voice, p. 45, 19 December 2000
- to defecate US
- — Don R. McCreary (Editor), Dawg Speak, 2001
- to criticise someone or something harshly US, 1916
- Soup kitchens slammed[.] New approach needed to tackle homelessness, says campaigner[.] — The Guardian, 7 January 2004
- to refuse to work US
Prison usage. - — Hyman E. Goldin et al., Dictionary of American Underworld Lingo, p. 196, 1950
- in hot rodding and car customising, to modify a car’s
suspension so as to lower the body US - — John Edwards, Auto Dictionary, p. 154, 1993
- while riding a surfboard or skateboard, to lose your balance and fall US
- — San Francisco Sunday Examiner & Chronicle, p. 20, 2 September 1984: ‘Say it right’
- — Nick Carroll, The Next Wave, 1991
- to slam dance US
- Go to punk gigs by himself. Slam in the pit with the boys until the pain sweated out of him[.] — Francesca Lia Block, Baby Be-Bop, p. 410, 1995
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