释义 |
jig noun- a black person US, 1922
Offensive. - Anyway, since you beat up the two jigs nobody will talk to me. — Mickey Spillane, I, The Jury, p. 90, 1947
- Want I should lock the jib in the drunk tank? — Thurston Scott, Cure it with Honey, p. 187, 1951
- Think of the thousand names hung on them trailing back into the darkest alleys of our racist past: coon; jig; darky; shine; Sambo; Jim Crow; buck; spearchucker etc. — Ken Kesey, Kesey’s Jail Journal, p. 14, 1967
- A lot of crazy jigs in the desert throwing spears at Italian planes. — Gilbert Sorrentino, Steelwork, p. 15, 1970
- Then after that if a guy was a Spic or a Jig it was his business. I mean it was his business, if he wanted to cling with his own kind. — Eugene Boe (Compiler), The Wit & Wisdom of Archie Bunker, p. 183, 1971
- And the jig says, no, he’s going to load it right there. — George V. Higgins, The Friends of Eddie Doyle, p. 22, 1971
- And this is sportree in the Zulu outfit, in case anybody doesn’t know he’s a jig. — Elmore Leonard, Swag, p. 25, 1976
- That fuckin’ jig’s gonna wish he never came outa the jungle. — Raging Bull, 1980
- Word’s going around that in addition to losing Ganz for the second time, and in addition to Haden busting you back to Patrolman, some jig beat the crap out of you. — 48 Hours, 1982
- “Goddamn jib,” Dale Junior said. Two of them, young black guys coming from the pickup now as Raylan got out and walked back toward them... — Elmore Leonard, Riding the Rap, pp. 10–11, 1995
- sexual intercourse AUSTRALIA
- — James McDonald, A Dictionary of Obscenity, Taboo and Euphemism, p. 75, 1988
- a deception; trickery; mischief US, 1777
- God knows what kind of jig he was dreaming up for himself. — Clancy Sigal, Going Away, p. 215, 1961
- in Newfoundland, a thread from a garment used to predict a date with a person of the opposite sex CANADA
- If you happened to pick a ravel or thread, locally called a “jig,” off your clothes, it could be used to determine the initial of your next date or boyfriend. — G.M. Story, oral citation from Dictionary of Newfoundland English, p. 277, 1982
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