释义 |
soul adjective pertaining to the essence of black culture US, 1946- — Current Slang, p. 5, Fall 1966
- Soul. Most times used as an adjective–in conjunction with such activities as eating, politics, music or social exchanges. — Sidney Bernard, This Way to the Apocalypse, p. 57, 1968
- The use of “soul” in black parlance drives in this same direction, toward a sense of ethnic unity based on some innate, irrational sense of community, brotherhood. — Roger Abrahams, Positively Black, p. 149, 1970
- The AAA gave “Soul Parties.” Everyone gretting with the new handshake, doing African dances that looked like overexaggerated gyrations. — Bobby Seale, A Lonely Rage, p. 164, 1978
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