释义 |
chop-chop noun- food US, 1951
- — J.E. Lighter, Historical Dictionary of American Slang, Volume 1, p. 413, 1994
- a meal, 1950
Used by UN troops in the Korean war, 1950–53. - oral sex performed on a man US
From the vocabulary of Vietnamese prostitutes, taken and used by US soldiers. - — Gregory Clark, Words of the Vietnam War, p. 172, 1990
- trade union factionalism US
- Soon I was indulging in “chop chop,” union jargon for factionalism. You couldn’t avoid it in those days in Detroit. — Clancy Sigal, Going Away, p. 315, 1961
- loose-leaf tobacco sold illegally AUSTRALIA
- [T]hey were the go-betweens in the lucrative trade of “chop chop”–or illicit tobacco. — Weekend Australian (Inquirer), p. 19, 2 February 2001
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