释义 |
huff verb- to inhale household or industrial chemicals for recreational purposes US, 1969
- — William D. Alsever, Glossary for the Establishment and Other Uptight People, p. 11, December 1970
- The brothers were among seven young men who repeatedly “huffed” or inhaled lacquer thinner to get a brief “high” as part of a small group of huffers in the Tampa Area. — San Francisco Examiner, p. 25, 19 November 1974
- Others commonly amuse themselves by inhaling assorted materials such as glue, gasoline and Lysol. Here they call it “huffing.” — Los Angeles Times, p. 10 (Magazine), 15 June 1986
- Huffing is usually an activity for the young, whose access to other drugs is limited, or for desperate types who’ll take any high they can find. — Vann Wesson, Generation X Field Guide and Lexicon, p. 92, 1997
- Huffing is street slang for inhaling chemicals such as cleaning fluids, glue and paint to get high, and it’s on the rise in Texas. — Austin (Texas) American-Statesman, p. A6, 8 March 1999
- [E]xplaining to young boys in confederate flag t-shirts why it was dangerous to huff gas. — Michelle Tea, Valencia, p. 97, 2000
- “When he was little he huffed paint and glue.” — Jonathan Kellerman, Rage, p. 217, 2005
- to steal TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO, 1990
- — Dictionary of the English/Creole of Trinidad & Tobago, 2003
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