释义 |
slope noun a person from South Asia US, 1948- — Current Slang, p. 18, Summer 1970
- One Army intelligence specialist said the pistol slaying of his Chinese interpreter was defended by his superior who said, “She was just a slope, anyway,” meaning she was an Asiatic. — Hunter S. Thompson, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, p. 73, 1971
- “You want this slope, man?” asks the huge, green-clad black man, walking towards us with the wriggling youth in his vice-like right hand. — William Nagel, The Odd Angry Shot, p. 69, 1975
- The belief that one Marine was better than ten Slopes saw Marine squads fed in against known NVA platoons[.] — Michael Herr, Dispatches, p. 102, 1977
- Yeah–classical stuff–scares the hell out of the slopes–the boys love it. — Apocalypse Now, 1979
- — Maledicta, p. 125, Summer 1980: “Racial and ethnic slurs: regional awareness and variations”
- Gooks could be both. Slants and slopes were civilians. Dinks could be both. — Nelson DeMille, Word of Honor, p. 414, 1985
- Slopes are resented for their brainpower and mathematical prowess. — Sydney Morning Herald, p. 7, 3 January 1987
- Oh, there are some soldiers thought Code Six as he watched, soldiers like Jimmy and I were, fighting the fucking GOOKS and SLANTS and SLOPES, soldiers trotting single file across a smoking field. — William T. Vollman, Whores for Gloria, p. 36, 1991
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