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词组 bone
释义 bone
noun
  1. the penis, especially when erect US, 1916
    • “Why, if you mean do I think I could get a bone up over that old buzzard, no, I don’t believe I could...” — Ken Kesey, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, p. 69, 1962
    • And when you fall down on your good gal and lower your bone / you got to make that pussy call your dick “Bad Mr. Al Capone.” — Bruce Jackson, Get Your Ass in the Water and Swim Like Me, p. 135, 1964
    • Torn or nicked cocks are common casualties as one endeavors to stuff a full bone into his pants and zip up. — John Francis Hunter, The Gay Insider, p. 191, 1971
    • Let her suck me up good, till I’ve got a fresh bone / And then I’ll come in like the sword in the stone. — Screw, p. 7, 15 May 1972
    • Every time she’d move her big ass, my bone would ache and throb. — A.S. Jackson, Gentleman Pimp, p. 15, 1973
    • Jessica Wylde is excellent as the chorus girl with a heart of gold, a head for business, and a body for balling, which she uses on financial backers when not getting the bone from Bert. — Adult Video, p. 80, August/September 1986
  2. the active participant in homosexual sex US
    • — AFSCME Local 3963, The Correctional Officer’s Guide to Prison Slang, 2001
  3. the middle finger raised in a gesture meaning, roughly, “fuck you!” US
    • [A]ll Jeff did was flip the bone at his old man which is a very dirty way of telling somebody where to get off. — Frederick Kohner, Gidget, p. 48, 1957
    • — Collin Baker et al., College Undergraduate Slang Study Conducted at Brown University, p. 85, 1968
    • — Eugene Landy, The Underground Dictionary, p. 38, 1971
  4. a marijuana cigarette; hence, marijuana US, 1978
    A visual pun.
    • — Richard A. Spears, The Slang and Jargon of Drugs and Drink, p. 62, 1986
    • Take a big bone hit/Cause after tha bud, My rhymes start flowin — Tone Loc, Cheeba cheeba, 1989
    • I used to go out wid him, but he’s a e-dyat [idiot] man, smokes too much bone. — Courttia Newland, Society Within, p. 13, 1999
    • — Mike Haskins, Drugs, p. 286, 2003
  5. a tobacco cigarette US
    A visual pun.
    • — Jay Robert Nash, Dictionary of Crime, p. 39, 1992
  6. a measurement of crack cocaine sold for $50 dollars US
    • We got Rocks, we got Bones, we got Brown, we got Stones. — Julian Johnson, Urban Survival, p. 170, 2003
  7. heroin US
    • — Peter Johnson, Dictionary of Street Alcohol and Drug Terms, p. 25, 1993
  8. a dollar US, 1889
    • Many, I had twelve bones on two twenty-seven and two thirty-seven came out. — Chester Himes, A Rage in Harlem, p. 48, 1957
    • I never heard of anybody offering a twenty-bone bounty for bagging a ball-cutter. — Ken Kesey, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, p. 69, 1962
    • “I’ll give you five dollars for it,” Mr. Goodman said. “Five bones!” Uncle Bud exclaimed indignantly. — Chester Himes, Cotton Comes to Harlem, p. 64, 1965
    • I sent you two dollars of it, but don’t spend it fast / ’cause those two bones will be your first and last. — Dennis Wepman et al., The Life, p. 141, 1976
    • Gimme twenty bones for both of ’em and take ’em on home! — Odie Hawkins, Chicago Hustle, p. 85, 1977
    • — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, p. 1, Fall 1996
    • Thousand, yes, bones or clams or whatever you call them. — The Big Lebowski, 1998
    • Me and Trick figured it would be at least ten bones each for gas roundtrip. — Linden Dalecki, Kid B, p. 137, 2006
  9. one thousand dollars US
    • They lend you a thousand and call it a bone. — Robert Campbell, Juice, p. 20, 1988
  10. a trombone US, 1918
    • Ross frequently lays aside his “bone” to take over the mike as Benny’s vocalist. — The Capitol, p. 6, July 1946
    • Furg’s ’bone was a brass bowel hooked in his nervous system, completing some rare equation of heart and body. — Malcolm Braly, Shake Him Till He Rattles, p. 85, 1963
    • Many of the performers belonged to a San Francisco trombone choir called the Bay Bones. — Time, p. 73, 5 March 1979
  11. an irritation; an annoyance; an aggravation US, 1944
    A figurative extension of a “bone in the throat”.
    • Three Feet angrily sweeps some glasses off the bar crashing them noisily to the floor. The bar falls silent. The barman saunters back to Three Feet. BARMAN (CONT’D) Tut. T’ain’t no need for dat bone, man. — Bernard Dempsey and Kevin McNally, Lock, Stock ... & Two Hundred Smoking Kalashnikovs, p. 112, 2000
  12. a domino US, 1959
    Usually in the plural.
    • Joe played dominoes with Smoothbore and Clovis. The thwacking of the bones punctuated desultory conversation. — Seth Morgan, Homeboy, p. 90, 1990
  13. in private poker games or other private gambling, a white betting chip US, 1866
    • — George Percy, The Language of Poker, p. 12, 1988
  14. a black person US
    • — William K. Bentley and James M. Corbett, Prison Slang, p. 54, 1992
  15. in baseball, an error in judgment US, 1915
    An abbreviation of “bonehead play” or BONER
  16. — Parke Cummings, Dictionary of Baseball, p. 9, 1950
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