释义 |
TCB verb to take care of business US Coined by the black community and then spread into widespread use.- Let’s TCB – that means taking care of business. — James Baldwin, Blues for Mister Charlie, p. 47, 1964
- R-E-S/P-E-C-T/ take care, TCB. — Otis Redding, Respect, 1965
- [T]here is a growing – a rapidly growing – body of black people determined to “T.C.B.”–take care of business. — Stokely Carmichael and Charles V. Hamilton, Black Power, pp. 184–185, 1967
- Yeah, you’ll be TCB / Which means you’re Taking Care of Business — Buz Kohon and William Angelos, TCB, 1968
- We went home in her Porsche and TCB’ed. — Cecil Brown, The Life & Loves of Mr. Jiveass Nigger, p. 149, 1969
- All the hip people got out of Media City and joined in the trip to this crazy retreat – where nothing but princesses and together brothers now come to lay back, relax, and T.C.B. — Steve Cannon, Groove, Bang, and Jive Around, p. 155, 1969
- Sapphire has to stand on the corner in the rain to T.C.B. while she watches her white co-worker catch tricks in a plush, warm, dry lobby. — Carolyn Greene, 70 Soul Secrets of Sapphire, p. 29, 1972
- — David Claerbaut, Black Jargon in White America, p. 82, 1972
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