释义 |
woof verb- to vomit US, 1978
- — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, p. 5, April 1978
- to eat very quickly UK, 1943
possibly from “wolf down”. - “How long must you be here?” Barto asked as he woofed down the food. — The Voice of the Martyrs Extreme Devotion, p. 74, 2001
- to threaten or intimidate someone; to engage someone in ritualistic, quasi-friendly insulting US
- “Ain’t you about to freeze to death, Pony?” “You ain’t a woofin’,” I said[.] — S.E. Hinton, The Outsiders, p. 49, 1967
- Just plain woofing pure and simple. — John Sinclair, Guitar Army, p. 345, 1972
- He was woofing me, because he winked at the blond kid[.] — Joseph Wambaugh, The Blue Knight, p. 70, 1973
- Don’t talk crazy. The dude was just woofin’. He still digs you. — Joseph Nazel, Black Cop, p. 105, 1974
- “You too new here to be woofin’ that shit, Monster.” — Sanyika Shakur, Monster, p. 153, 1993
- “The seas part, the assholes in the back rows start woofing you out, you bite the bullet and you split.” — Richard Price, Samaritan, p. 167, 2003
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