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词组 pop
释义 pop
verb
  1. to ejaculate; to experience orgasm US
    • She likes them jittery tricks cause they pop fast. — Robert Gover, One Hundred Dollar Misunderstanding, p. 20, 1961
    • But they’ll just open up their pants, and in two or three minutes they’ll pop. — John Warren Wells, Tricks of the Trade, p. 14, 1970
    • I remember the time we muscled a mud kicker when we was oh ten ... twelve and got our first blowjob together. He passed out when he popped. — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), Death Wish, p. 174, 1977
    • The cocks pop and the wads fly as wide-open mouths train to catch the steaming jizz. — Adult Video, p. 32, August/September 1986
    • Then indeed he did pop all over her, and she went raging out of there with semen all over her hair and face[.] — Robert Stoller and I.S. Levine, Coming Attractions, p. 56, 1991
    • In fact, we’ve gone through 15 studs and not one has popped yet. — Anthony Petkovich, The X Factory, p. 190, 1997
    • I even got to the point where I could pop during sex–but only if somebody was buffing the muff while we were going at it. — Amy Sohn, Run Catch Kiss, p. 115, 1999
  2. to have sex with someone US
    • Well, did you pop her? You must have jugged her by now, haven’t you? — Claude Brown, Manchild in the Promised Land, p. 363, 1965
    • “ Oh, man, I popped her a couple, and blam, I was in love,” Bill said. — Cecil Brown, The Life & Loves of Mr. Jiveass Nigger, p. 113, 1969
    • I’d get more thrill out of popping the dead / Than I got out of you in a nice warm bed. — Dennis Wepman et al., The Life, p. 143, 1976
    • I’ll pop a broad in a minute, but nothing to get tied down to, right, Chappie? — Edwin Torres, Q & A, p. 117, 1977
  3. (used of a male) to have sex with a virgin BAHAMAS
    • — John A. Holm, Dictionary of Bahamian English, p. 159, 1982
  4. to give birth US
    • What would rapists be doing going after a woman ready to pop? — Robert Campbell, Sweet La-La Land, p. 33, 1990
  5. to fart UK
    Childish; used in the US, UK and Australia. Also phrased as “pop off” and “pop a whiff”.
    • [M]y botty popped. — Peter Furze, Tailwinds, p. 141, 1998
  6. to administer medication UK
    • They’d have to work with us proper... not pop us full of pills and leave us in a fucking wheelchair. — Shaun Ryder, Shaun Ryder... in His Own Words, 1991
  7. to inject a drug US
    • I never popped in a vein, Carter. — George Mandel, Flee the Angry Strangers, p. 290, 1952
    • They want to pop. They want company. — John D. McDonald, The Neon Jungle, p. 44, 1953
  8. to take a pill US, 1968
    • Also has been known to pop a greenie. — Jim Bouton, Ball Four, p. 212, 1970
    • I participated in the popping of the old love drug[.] — Dave Courtney, Raving Lunacy, p. 73, 2000
    • Painkillers–particularly Vicodin–have stormed back onto the drug scene in the States in recent months and are apparently being popped like Smarties at showbiz parties. — Drugs An Adult Guide, FHM Bionic, p. 25, December 2001
  9. when using amyl nitrate, to break the glass ampoules containing the gas US
    • — Steven Daly and Nalthaniel Wice, alt.culture, p. 185, 1995
  10. to inhale a powdered drug UK, 1998
    • — Mike Haskins, Drugs, p. 291, 2003
  11. to steal something US, 1994 Originally in black use.
  12. to obtain confidential or classified information about someone as part of an investigation US
    • — Jim Crotty, How to Talk American, p. 52, 1997
  13. to arrest someone US
    • That fool had driven across the country with a blond without them. Lucky he got popped in the Apple instead of the lowlands. — Babs Gonzales, Movin’ On Down De Line, p. 80, 1975
    • Elijah glared at him. Motherfucker! and threw the empty whiskey bottle out of the open window and held his hands up for the cuffs. Popped again. — Odie Hawkins, Chicago Hustle, p. 100, 1977
    • Thought they only popped him with two in the apartment. — Edwin Torres, After Hours, p. 208, 1979
    • There’s nothing to worry about. Carmine got popped. — Gerald Petievich, To Live and Die in L.A., p. 31, 1983
    • Popped for possession and sale of cocaine, lowered to some kind of misdemeanor. — James Ellroy, Suicide Hill, p. 575, 1986
  14. to fire a gun UK, 1725
    • I go to this little firing range downtown, pop off a few rounds, and it always makes me feel better. — American Beauty, 1999
    • He gets popped like twenty-thirty times and all hands is getting zapped — Kevin Sampson, Clubland, p. 2, 2002
  15. to hit someone US
    • And he did his entire stretch in a series of thirty days at a time in solitary, for popping a guard. — Stephen Gaskin, Amazing Dope Tales, p. 191, 1980
  16. to kill someone US
    • You keep thinking that they wouldn’t pop you out in broad daylight[.] — Mickey Spillane, Kiss Me Deadly, p. 90, 1952
    • Armand tried to think how his brothers used to say it. They would say they were going to do a guy. Or they might say so-and-so got popped. Maybe because when you used a suppressor it made a popping sound, like an air rifle. — Elmore Leonard, Killshot, p. 74, 1989
    • I’m not gonna pop her, Harry. — Get Shorty, 1995
  17. to pay for something US
    • Yeah, but let me pop for it. — Willard Motley, Let No Man Write My Epitaph, p. 73, 1958
    • The records and phonograph caught his eye, too. “You pop for all this?” — Ross Russell, The Sound, p. 188, 1961
  18. to praise or promote someone or something US
    • You don’t pop the opposition, Teddy. — Dan Jenkins, Life Its Ownself, p. 318, 1984
  19. to applaud and cheer enthusiastically US
    Professional wrestling usage.
    • [T]he audience pops big enough to blow the roof off. — Rampage Magazine, p. 35, September 2000
  20. to send an e-mail to someone UK
    • Ewell Court Park has taken a bit of a hammering with grafitti over the past few weeks. [...] If you have any information as to the identity of these budding artists then give me a buzz or pop me an e-mail. — PC Jane Eames, Surrey Police, 27 February 2004
  21. to go to or from somewhere, especially swiftly or suddenly UK, 1530
    Usually used with “up”, “down”, “in”, “out”, “over”, “about”, “off”, “between”, etc.
    • [H]e left and popped into town to try to score some puff. — Colin Butts, Is Harry on the Boat?, p. 38, 1997
  22. in pinball, to win a replay or additional ball, activating the sound effect known as a knocker US
    • — Bobbye Claire Natkin and Steve Kirk, All About Pinball, p. 114, 1977
  23. (of a car boot or bonnet) to open remotely US
    • Pop the trunk, I need my tool. — Gone in 60 Seconds, 2000
  24. (of a number bet on in an illegal lottery) to win US
    • “Maybe three or four years after this, 427 finally pops, but not for much.” — Peter Maas, The Valachi Papers, p. 140, 1968
  25. to open US
    • Pop the trunk, I need my tool. — Gone in 60 Seconds, 2000
pop a cap
to shoot a gun US
  • MARSELLUS: I’m prepared to scour the earth for this motherfucker. If Butch goes to Indo China, I want a nigger hidin’ in a bowl of rice, ready to pop a cap in his ass. — Pulp Fiction, 1965
  • Outside of the accidental shot fired by Eddie Cervantes when he used his revolver as a club, nobody had popped a single cap in the canyons. — Joseph Wambaugh, Lines and Shadows, p. 101, 1984
pop a top
to open a can of beer US, 1967
An inevitable reduplication with the advent of aluminium cans with pull-tabs in the early 1970s.▶ pop corn
to engage in a swindle or dishonest scheme US
  • — Mark S. Fleisher, Beggars & Thieves: Lives of Urban Street Criminals, p. 290, 1995: “Glossary”
pop junk
to gossip US
  • Frederick (Maryland) Post, p. B2, 24 May 1990: “For home boys and zimmers; this dictionary is def!”
pop smoke
to detonate a smoke grenade US
  • El Paso signals Doc Johnson to pop smoke and Doc pulls the pin on a smoke grenade. — John M. Del Vecchio, The 13th Valley, p. 632, 1982
pop the chute
in sailing, to release the spinnaker US
  • “ Okay!” Winnie shouted. “Let’s pop the chute!” — Joseph Wambaugh, The Golden Orange, p. 286, 1990
pop ya collar
to respect yourself UK
  • — Susie Dent, The Language Report, p. 78, 2003
pop your clogs
to die UK
Literally, “to put your shoes in the pawnbroker’s” (because you have no further use for them).
  • Not a bad way to go though, is it? I mean if you did pop your clogs at an outdoor rave. — Dave Courtney, Raving Lunacy, p. 190, 2000
  • Then she got pneumonia and popped her clogs. — Jenny Eclair, Camberwell Beauty, p. 37, 2000
  • When it’s time for me to go, I wouldn’t mind popping my clogs like that. — Jimmy Stockin, On The Cobbles, p. 158, 2000
pop your nuts
to ejaculate US
  • They just want to pop their nuts as fast as they can. — John Warren Wells, Tricks of the Trade, p. 14, 1970
pop your pumpkin
to lose your temper US
  • The boss man’d just naturally pop his pumpkin if he found out about it. — Jim Thompson, Roughneck, p. 16, 1954
pop your rocks
to ejaculate US
  • [H]ere was this guy looking her in the eye like he wanted something more than to pop his rocks. — John Sayles, Union Dues, p. 189, 1977
pop your water
to ejaculate BAHAMAS, 1971
  • — John A. Holm, Dictionary of Bahamian English, p. 32, 1982
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更新时间:2024/11/14 17:08:04