释义 |
bonk verb- to hit someone or something with, or against, something hard UK, 1931
- "He was going to shoot me," I said. "But I threw the lamp at him and then I thumped him and then he ran away and Jean bonked him." — Martin Waddell, Otley, p. 136, 1966
- to have sex UK, 1975
- His plan was to shack up with some fat girlfriend of his, piping [smoking crack cocaine] and bonking the night away[.] — Lanre Fehintola, Charlie Says..., p. 160, 2000
- [T]hose caught bonking livestock were quickly put to death. — Erica Orloff and JoAnn Baker, Dirty Little Secrets, p. 9, 2001
- [Y]ou can hear us bonking but you’re not getting a look at our record collection. — Mark Steel, Reasons to be Cheerful, p. 176, 2001
- in an endurance sport, especially cycling, to reach a point of utter exhaustion US, 1979
- The challenge is to fuel ourbodies to meet enormous energy needs, spare glycogen stores so we don’t “bonk”[.] — Baltimore Sun, p. 7D, 2 August 1994
- The athlete may “bonk,” “hit the wall” or “blow up,” as the terminology goes. — Washington Post, p. A1, 11 June 2001
- to bounce a snowboard off a non-snow platform US
From the noise of the contact between board and DEATH BOX- — Jim Humes and Sean Wagstaff, Boarderlands, p. 220, 1995
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