释义 |
kid verb to fool, to pretend UK, 1811- He was just kidding. Wasn’t you governor? — Clive Exton, No Fixed Abode [Six Granada Plays], p. 133, 1959
- "Don’t be daft, if it is the bogeys [police] how can they touch us?" "With two hot motors round the back? Who are you kidding?" — Derek Bickerton, Payroll, p. 43, 1959
- She smiled, but her eyes stayed the same. I recalled her phrase, “Kidding on the square.” — John A. Williams, The Angry Ones, p. 72, 1969
- Which I thought was funny. I think he was “kidding on the square,” a phrase I hope will catch on. — Al Franken, Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them, p. 212, 2003
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