释义 |
ruck noun- a heated argument; a fight UK
Possibly derives from obsolete “rux” (bad temper, anger, passion, noise) or conventional “ruckus”. - So one day they had a moody ruck and made out that they had a punch up. — Frank Norman, Bang To Rights, p. 60, 1958
- — Tom Hibbert, Rockspeak!, p. 136, 1983
- a smattering of London psychos currently following Chelsea because you get a better class of ruck. — Martin King and Martin Knight, The Naughty Nineties, p. 51, 1999
- a rucksack or backpack US
- “You ever been under a ruck? You couldn’t even pick my ruck up.” — John Del Vecchio, The 13 Valley, p. 25, 1982
|