释义 |
hummer noun- an act of oral sex performed on a man US, 1971
- Did you check that poony out? I could parlay this into a hummer at least! — Airheads, 1994
- He was getting a hummer. — Stephen J. Cannell, White Sister, p. 155, 2006
- an exceptionally good thing UK, 1681
- Marvelous little section of life in ultra fast lane, absolutely on a hummer. — Odie Hawkins, Scars and Memories, pp. 56–57, 1987
- an arrest for something the person did not do; an arrest for a minor violation that leads to more serious charges US, 1932
- — Francis J. Rigney and L. Douglas Smith, The Real Bohemia, p. xv, 1961
- “You know the lieutenant doesn’t want any hummer pinches.” “Aw, it was no hummer, Jake,” said Simeone. — Joseph Wambaugh, The New Centurions, p. 175, 1970
- I got busted on a hummer, something like that, my first day in. — Odie Hawkins, Ghetto Sketches, p. 123, 1972
- a minor mistake US, 1959
- — Robert S. Gold, A Jazz Lexicon, p. 154, 1964
- a joke, a prank US
- — Charles Shafer, Folk Speech in Texas Prisons, p. 207, 1990
- the Grumman E-2, an early warning aircraft US
Given the official nickname “Hawkeye”, it was instantly renamed by the troops. - The Hawkeye early warning aircraft, nicknamed “Hummer,” had just informed him of unidentified “bogies” approaching the battle group. — Joe Weber, Defcon One, p. 3, 1989
- It is nearly impossible to flip on a TV set without seeing one–the new workhouse of the ground trooper nicknamed the Hummer. — Washington Times, p. G4, 22 February 1991
- an army weapons carrier US, 1983
The official designation is a High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle. The slang is easier. - He drove the camouflaged High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle (or “Hummer”) through Washington streets as he was chased by several patrol cars. — Chuck Shepherd, News of the Weird, p. 124, 1989
|