释义 |
pin noun- the leg or foot UK, 1530
Usually in the plural. - Soon as I was back on my pins, I began running up to Harlem again[.] — Mezz Mezzrow, Really the Blues, p. 283, 1946 Dolls who must cross their pins at ringside tables should be sure they have nice ones. — Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, New York Confidential, p. 222, 1948
- But I did, for some twenty pages of light blast, violate the ironclad altar of femininity and point out mom’s big mouth and little brain, her puffed crop and shaky pins. — Philip Wylie, Opus 21, p. 20, 1949
- I was wobbly on my pins but my eyes slwoly came back into focus and I was able to read again. — Alexander King, Mine Enemy Grows Older, p. 46, 1958
- O’MALLY: [...] Did you see those legs she had on her? BELL: I saw them. O’MALLY: Did you ever see such pins, did you, did you honestly now? — Graeme Kent, The Queen’s Corporal [Six Granada Plays], p. 87, 1959
- [H]e couldn’t see her legs because she was standing behind a sofa, but if anybody asked him to bet, and he never bet on anything, he would bet that she had absolutely gorgeous pins. — Richard Condon, Prizzi’s Glory, p. 4, 1988
- I can make it on my own two fucking pins thank you. — William T. Vollman, Whores for Gloria, p. 103, 1991
- I don’t feel too steady on the ol’ pins. — Colin Butts, Is Harry on the Boat?, p. 210, 1997
- Nifty on her pins is that ‘un. — The Full Monty, 1997
- a hypodermic syringe and needle used for the injection of narcotics US, 1973
- — Richard A. Spears, The Slang and Jargon of Drugs and Drink, p. 388, 1986
- a very thin marijuana cigarette US, 1967
- — Richard A. Spears, The Slang and Jargon of Drugs and Drink, p. 389, 1986
- — Pamela Munro, U.C.L.A. Slang, p. 97, 1997
- — Simon Worman, Joint Smoking Rules, 2001
- — Mike Haskins, Drugs, p. 288, 2003
- a person who serves as a lookout US
- — William K. Bentle and James M.Corbett, Prison Slang, p. 40, 1992
▷ see:PINPOSITION |