释义 |
sus; suss noun- suspicion UK, 1936
- [T]he bogies were about to search him on some very hot sus[.] — Charles Raven, Underworld Nights, p. 9, 1956
- I began to have a strong sus that Billie was having games. — Frank Norman, Bang To Rights, p. 44, 1958
- She is always liable to be arrested for “suss”; when he has been arrested it has always been on “suss”; [three West Indian pickpockets] are all frightened of “suss”. — New Society, 7 July 1977
- The “Sus” law, an adaptation of a 19th-century vagrancy act, which allowed the police to stop, search and detain anyone regarded as “suspicious” — Mark Steel, Reasons to be Cheerful, p. 97, 2001
- an arrest on suspicion; a person being arrested for loitering with suspicion UK
- — David Powis, The Signs of Crime, 1977
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