释义 |
underground noun a hidden counterculture US, 1935 Usually in a political context, although in the 1960s also in a cultural context.- — J. L. Simmons and Barry Winograd, It’s Happening, p. 174, 1966: “glossary”
- There are many undergrounds, from Dostoyevsky’s to New York’s IRT. The hippie’s is that crosshatched spot on the cultural map where one finds the advanced styles, moods and beliefs of the “trendsetter.” — Sidney Bernard, This Way to the Apocalypse, p. 59, 1968
- In each city of the world there is a loose competitive underground composed of groups whose aims overlap, conflict, and generally enervate the desired goal of autonomy. — The Digger Papers, p. 15, August 1968
- The number of underground newspapers went from fifty to a hundred to three hundred in a matter of a few months[.] — Raymond Mungo, Famous Long Ago, p. 41, 1970
- The question of advertisements in an underground newspaper is always a sticky business. — The Berkeley Tribe, p. 5, 26 June–3 July 1970
- He went underground, man. — Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong, Santa Claus and his Old Lady, 1971
- I think there is such an underground but probably I would say Mr. Hoover has it a little distorted. As was said before by Billy, I think this underground is a growing consciousness. — The Last Supplement to the Whole Earth Catalog, p. 15, March 1971
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