释义 |
taste noun- an alcoholic drink US, 1919
- “Well, Marie, you buying me a taste is righteous and perhaps I’ll be able to hip you to something else you can buy me.” — A.S. Jackson, Gentleman Pimp, p. 74, 1973
- After all, they were part of a unique police experiment and a guy needed a taste or two when he’d been stumbling around for hours out there in the black of night[.] — Joseph Wambaugh, Lines and Shadows, p. 103, 1984
- a sample US
- For Christmas. Your share. It’s just a taste. — Goodfellas, 1990
- a small sample of drugs, especially heroin US
- Okay, so you’re off it, but a little bit won’t hurt. Just a taste. — Hal Ellson, The Golden Spike, p. 29, 1952
- I got a little taste here. — Willard Motley, Let No Man Write My Epitaph, p. 149, 1958
- “If I could just get a taste,” Fay said. — Alexander Trocchi, Cain’s Book, p. 37, 1960
- At the moment, like Sammy, he had only a chippy, and got most of the heroin he needed by hanging around other addicts who occasionally turned him on with a taste[.] — James Mills, The Panic in Needle Park, p. 35, 1966
- He’s got the works, gives you sweet taste. — Velvet Underground, I’m Waiting for the Man, 1967
- Did you say sometin’ ‘bout havin’ a taste? — Odie Hawkins, Ghetto Sketches, p. 24, 1972
- Man, if he’s got any morphine, we can do some business with him. Maybe we can get a little taste out of him. — Herbert Huncke, Guilty of Everything, p. 69, 1990
- For Christmas. Your share. It’s just a taste. — Goodfellas, 1990
- — Robert Ashton, This Is Heroin, p. 210, 2002
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