释义 |
pop verb- 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
- 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
- (used of a male) to have sex with a virgin BAHAMAS
- — John A. Holm, Dictionary of Bahamian English, p. 159, 1982
- 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
- 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
- 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
- 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
- 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
- when using amyl nitrate, to break the glass ampoules containing the gas US
- — Steven Daly and Nalthaniel Wice, alt.culture, p. 185, 1995
- to inhale a powdered drug UK, 1998
- — Mike Haskins, Drugs, p. 291, 2003
- to steal something US, 1994 Originally in black use.
- to obtain confidential or classified information about someone as part of an investigation US
- — Jim Crotty, How to Talk American, p. 52, 1997
- 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
- 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
- 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
- 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
- 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
- to praise or promote someone or something US
- You don’t pop the opposition, Teddy. — Dan Jenkins, Life Its Ownself, p. 318, 1984
- 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
- 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
- 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
- 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
- (of a car boot or bonnet) to open remotely US
- Pop the trunk, I need my tool. — Gone in 60 Seconds, 2000
- (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
- 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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