释义 |
perk noun- an advantage, in addition to salary, that is offered by a particular employment UK, 1869
An abbreviation of “perquisite”. - We don’t get any perks at all. — John Wynnum, Tar Dust, p. 25, 1962
- He pours some of the champagne into a spare glass. “So have a fringe benefit. I know you earn your perks.” — Ted Lewis, Jack Carter’s Law, p. 67, 1974
- Furthermore, where were all the perks he’d heard about? — Lance Peters, The Dirty Half-Mile, p. 29, 1979
- No more perks? — Anthony Masters, Minder, p. 127, 1984
- They want to be top dog and get all the perks. — Dave Courtney, Stop the Ride I Want to Get Off, p. 8, 1999
- You go for whatever you can get away with, threaten a couple of times to walk out and see if they’ll throw in some perks. — Elmore Leonard, Be Cool, p. 67, 1999
- a tablet of Percodan, a painkiller US, 1971
Also variant “perc”. - Get some up in Boystown, New York Avenue, those cute guys had anything you wanted, knockout drops, percs, street ludes, all kinds of meth. — Elmore Leonard, Glitz, p. 131, 1985
- He remembered a thousand Soledad bull sessions about dope and dry-swallowed two perks and three dexies. — James Ellroy, Suicide Hill, p. 749, 1986
- Pop a Perc and have a beer and that’s it, sweetness all evening. — Suroosh Alvi et al., The Vice Guide, p. 109, 2002
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