释义 |
FUBAR adjective- used as an expression of disgust because a situation is fucked up beyond all recognition US, 1944
Of the many military acronyms with a prominent “F” coined during World War 2, one of the few to survive. - “Not only profanity has crept into your speech,” she said, “but also the peculiar jargon of the Army.” “Snafu,” I said, “tarfu, fubar, and weft.” — Max Shulman, The Zebra Derby, p. 174, 1946
- The young men didn’t need a recruiter to tell them that things at home were about the same as they’d been in ’Nam, which was to say, in marine parlance, FUBAR. — Bob Sipchen, Baby Insane and the Buddha, p. 46, 1993
- I clearly saw three blackened dwarf figures curled into fetal twists, FUBAR. — Cherokee Paul McDonald, into the Green, p. 63, 2001
- In 1993 he [Brandon Block] ran a Sunday night [club] “FUBAR” (Fucked Up Beyond All Recognition). — Dave Haslam, Adventures of the Wheels of Steel, p. 115, 2001
- drunk US, 1985
A sense created by using “fucked up” to mean “drunk”, not “botched”. - — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, p. 2, Fall 1991
|