释义 |
lollipop noun- a police officer UK, 1965
Rhyming slang for COP. A shorter variant is “lolly”. - — Paul Tempest, Lag’s Lexicon, 1950
- — Julian Franklyn, A Dictionary of Rhyming Slang, 1960
- At the Bastille the lollipop said the fare must pay the price on the meter. — Frank Hardy, The Yarns of Billy Borker, p. 96, 1965
- — Frank Hardy, Hardy’s People, p. 111, 1986
- in cricket, a delivery that is easy to play AUSTRALIA, 1985
- I was batting when Nikki sent down a lollipop and whoosh, what a shot. — Paul Vautin, Turn It Up!, p. 92, 1995
- in sport, a clever or ostentatious trick UK
Rhyming slang on “lollipop stick”. - — Susie Dent, The Language Report, p. 53, 2003
- in trucking, a mile marker at the side of the road US
- — Wayne Floyd, Jason’s Authentic Dictionary of CB Slang, p. 21, 1976
- marijuana FIJI, 2003
Recorded by Jan Tent. - a sugar daddy (an older man who supports or helps support a young woman) UK, 1961
Recorded as being used by “shopgirls and typists”. - a soldier removed from combat US
- For the men of the 33rd any man farther back–in sector, division, or corps, is a “lollipop,” only slightly better than than a “Saigon commando.” — Jim Lucas, Dateline: Viet Nam, p. 189, 1966
- an attractive young woman seen only in terms of her sexuality US
- [T]he next thing Robbie Hurt knew, he was regaling three wide-eyed lollypops with a story as to how he got his “wound.” — Joseph Wambaugh, Lines and Shadows, p. 218, 1984
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