释义 |
slam dance verb to dance in a violent manner popular in punk and post-punk settings US, 1981 Slam dancing was good fodder for popular television in the US, with the Chips episode that aired on 31 January 1982 and the Quincy episode of 2nd December 1982, both of which centred around the relatively new phenomenon.- Other club managers and regular club-goers blamed the violence on organized Huntington Beach-area punk gangs who make a practice of pummeling each other and slam dancing at area clubs. — Los Angeles Times, p. 3 (Calenda, 29 June 1980
- Robert Louis Stevenson, the original author of this class-turned-silly, may slam-dance in his coffin. — Los Angeles Times, p. 5, 5 July 1981
- [T]he early Saturday evening mob of U.S. teens and young adults who descend on Tijuana to get drunk, slam-dance in nightclubs, fight, bleed, vomit, and, in general, have a wonderful time. — Joseph Wambaugh, Finnegan’s Week, p. 266, 1993
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