释义 |
log noun- a turd US, 1973
From a similarity in appearance to a log of wood; possibly also from the shared characteristic of an ability to float. Especially in the phrasal verb LAY A LOG - a marijuana cigarette US, 1977
- — Richard A. Spears, The Slang and Jargon of Drugs and Drink, p. 320, 1986
- — Mike Haskins, Drugs, p. 288, 2003
- phencyclidine, the recreational drug known as PCP or angel dust UK, 1998
- a carton of cigarettes US
- — Lee McNelis, 30 + And a Wake-Up, p. 9, 1991
- the counter surface in a bar US, 1967
- I saw him pound the bottom of his glass against the log. — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), Pimp, p. 120, 1969
- a bar or tavern US
- — Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, Chicago Confidential, p. 301, 1950: “Loop lexicon”
- a heavy, cumbersome surfboard US
- — Grant W. Kuhns, On Surfing, p. 118, 1963
- a dullard US, 1895
- A well-dressed man, informal or casual, will stir her memories of those days when she was “heart whole and fancy free”, before she got tied up with the “log” she married[.] — John O’Grady, Aussie Etiket, p. 25, 1971
- — Jim Ramsay, Cop It Sweet!, p. 55, 1977
▶ behind the log (used of a betting style in poker) conservative, even when winning US, 1971- — Thomas L. Clark, The Dictionary of Gambling and Gaming, p. 16, 1987
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