释义 |
pod noun- marijuana US
- Don’t say pot, Dinch. It’s the intellectuals from college and all who come on that way. They want to get their hip-cards punched. Say pod, Dincher. — George Mandel, Flee the Angry Strangers, p. 26, 1952
- — American Speech, p. 304, December 1955: “Wayne University slang”
- Nice stud. He made pod but not junk. — William Burroughs, Letters to Allen Ginsberg 1953–1957, p. 89, 19 February 1955
- “That doesn’t mean you have to tear it up, smoking pod and —” — Herbert Simmons, Corner Boy, p. 27, 1957
- So I put in on him for a sawski and make a meet to sell him some “pod” as he calls it[.] — William Burroughs, Naked Lunch, p. 4, 1957
- Sometimes he [Jack Kerouac] lapses into pages of terrifying gibberish that sound like a tape recording of a gang bang with everybody full of pod, juice and bennies all at once. — The Nation, p. 61, 23 February 1957
- Neither will he [the beat] tell you that marijuana used to be called “tea,” then “tea pot,” then simply “pot,” and now simply “pod” all to confuse the square. — San Francisco Chronicle, p. 4, 15 June 1958
- Oh, you know, man–the score you was with that time–the one that wanted pod so bad. — John Rechy, City of Night, p. 140, 1963
- a marijuana cigarette CANADA
- — Basic Beatnik (in the “Daily Colonist”, Victoria, BC), 16 April 1958
- the head US
- I nudged my pod. — William “Lord” Buckley, The Ballad of Dan McGroo, 1960
- an orthopaedist US
- — Sally Williams, “ Strong” Words, p. 135, 1994
- the tail of a surfboard CANADA
- — Gary Fairmont R. Filosa II, The Surfer’s Almanac, p. 191, 1977
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