释义 |
bolo noun- in boxing, an uppercut US, 1950
- Gavilan, a hustling bolo-swinger, fought in flurries and piled up an early lead on points. — Time, p. 91, 10 September 1951
- Kid Gavilan, whose famed bolo punches made him world welterweight champion in the 1950s, has arrived from his native Cuba to live in exile. — San Francisco Examiner, p. 47, 17 September 1968
- Kid Gavilan’s “Bolo Punch” Renamed ALI’S GHETTO WHOPPER [Headline] — San Francisco Chronicle, 16 May 1974
- a directive to be on the look-out for something US
- I’m sorry, old man, but he cops put a BOLO out on the Caddy so I had Tommy get rid of the darn thing. — Carl Hiaasen, Tourist Season, p. 231, 1986
- Struggling frantically through traffic to get back behind the fleeing car, they radioed the dispatcher for what Fort Lauderdale police call a Bolo–“be on the lookout.” — James Mills, The Underground Empire, p. 157, 1986
- a friend UK
Described as a “hippy term”. - — David Powis, The Signs of Crime, 1977
- a traveller to Antarctica who is jaded and exhausted from having been there too long ANTARCTICA
- — Cool Antartica, 2003: “Antarctic slang”
- crack cocaine US
Spanish. - — US Department of Justice, Street Terms, October 1994
- an unknown, sinister male US
- — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, p. 2, October 2002
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