释义 |
Soul Alley; Soul City; Soulsville noun an area in Saigon with bars and brothels patronised largely by black US soldiers US- Americans stationed or spending leave in Saigon go to Soul City, a few seedy waterfront blocks. — Maxwell Boas, The Drug Beat, p. 149, 1970
- For example, black soldiers in Saigon prefer the Kahn Hoi river front district, formerly the hang-out of the black Senegalese troops during the French occupation, and now dubbed “Soulsville.” — Helen Hughes, Racial and Ethnic Relations, p. 18, 1970
- Between 400 and 500 of these live in an area of Saigon which is called Soul Alley. The area is “off limits” to US personnel and one enters at his own risk. — Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, Military Drug Abuse, p. 61, 1971
- Not too far from the main gate of Tan Son Nhut was Soul Alley, where you could find Cambodian girls in bars who could readily pass for black females. — Wallace Terry, Bloods, p. 164, 1984
- — Linda Reinberg, In the Field, p. 204, 1991
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