释义 |
trip verb- to experience a drug-induced hallucinogenic euphoria US, 1966
Also “trip out”. - Casper’s crew loved tripping–and I don’t mean nature rambles. — Wayne Anthony, Spanish Highs, p. 65, 1999
- to engage in flights of fancy, especially while in prison US
- “Sorry, I thought you might have fallen asleep with your clothes on.” “I’m just lying here tripping.” — Malcolm Braly, On the Yard, p. 175, 1967
- — Current Slang, p. 49, Fall 1968
- You forget you’ve eaten shortly after they’ve left, and get delirious or go tripping again. — James Carr, Bad, p. 26, 1975
- I would lie in my cell and trip two and three hours out of every day; I could see myself walking through the Village, see the red paint, see the clothesline, the tree in the middle of the courtyard. — Bobby Seale, A Lonely Rage, p. 225, 1978
- to get angry, to lose control because of anger US
- Valaida, if I had known you were going to trip out about this, I wouldn’t have mentioned the subject. — Odie Hawkins, The Life and Times of Chester Simmons, p. 175, 1991
- DREXEL: Why you trippin? We jus’ fuckin’ with ya. — True Romance, 1993
- He’s been trippin’ since we been in the hospital. — Menace II Society, 1993
- to insult US
- Louis said, “Mostly when you trippin’ on some motherfucker, giving him a bad time, you say it.” — Elmore Leonard, Riding the Rap, p. 55, 1995
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