释义 |
panic noun- a widespread unavailability of an illegal drug US, 1937
- Election is over and the panic is off. — George Mandel, Flee the Angry Strangers, p. 55, 1952
- This was the Panic: people dying unseen, scraping the sugary bottoms of cookers, licking the bitter taste away with their tongues, frightened and cursing the unknown torment within their intestines. — Clarence Cooper Jr, The Scene, p. 30, 1960
- And then if this really does turn out to be a real bad panic, well then too I’ll–we’ll–always have stuff. — James Mills, The Panic in Needle Park, p. 41, 1966
- Everything was going as good as could be expected, till the panic hit. There was a short go of heroin on account of some big wheeler-dealer with millions of dollars’ worth of the stuff had gotten himself busted and this caused a bad shortage. — Piri Thomas, Down These Mean Streets, p. 202, 1967
- He puttin’ out that weak shit like the panic was on or somethin’. — Nathan Heard, Howard Street, p. 117, 1968
- There’s been a panic. Until this morning I couldn’t cop [buy] any stuff [heroin]. — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), Pimp, p. 99, 1969
- A panic was on among the junkies. There were still a few people able to connect–but on the whole conditions were bad. — Herbert Huncke, The Evening Sun Turned Crimson, p. 84, 1980
- a very good time US
- — San Francisco News, p. 6, 25 March 1958
- — Judi Sanders, Faced and Faded, Hanging to Hurl, p. 30, 1993
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