释义 |
white-bread adjective everyday, unexciting, respectable; representing the epitome of white middle-class values and style US- — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, p. 10, Spring 1991
- It was kind of a white-bread neighborhood[.] — Wolfman Jack (Bob Smith), Have Mercy!, p. 31, 1995
- They were white-bread, all-American boys in all but one critical degree, which is that they didn’t care fuck-all about material wealth. — Peter Coyote, Sleeping Where I Fall, p. 133, 1998
- [T]his was just the airy-fairy, “don’t we all live in a wonderful white-bread Christian world” stuff. The hard-core material was, appropropriately, on the higher shelves. — Christopher Brookmyre, Not the End of the World, p. 251, 1998
- If you don’t look straight-up, white-bread (not white as in race, white as in bland), Middle America then don’t even think about showing up somewhere in person. — Eleusis Lightning on the Sun [The Howard Marks Book of Dope Stories], p. 329, 2001
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