释义 |
kike noun a Jewish person US, 1904 Not much room for anything but hate with this word. It is believed that the term originated at the Ellis Island immigration facility in New York harbour, where Jewish immigrants who could not write were instructed to make a circle, or kikel in Yiddish.- It took just a whispered "kike" or "Jew bastard" from a member of some rival Polish or Irish gang, and fists were flying between us. — Mezz Mezzrow, Really the Blues, p. 6, 1946
- He wouldn’t be rimmed no sir, not him, because he wasn’t the kind of a chump who allowed himself to be chumped by a cheap kike auctioneer. — James T. Farrell, Willie Collins, p. 107, 1946
- Tell me, Dadier, what do you think of kikes and mockies and micks and donkeys and frogs and niggers, Dadier. — Evan Hunter, The Blackboard Jungle, p. 209, 1954
- [I]ts attitude toward homosexuals bears correspondence to the pain of the liberal or radical at hearing someone utter a word like "nigger" or "kike"[.] — Norman Mailer, Advertisements for Myself, p. 223, 1954
- "Son of a bitch kike!" Bubbles screams. "You got gissum all over the couch!" — Philip Roth, Portnoy’s Complaint, p. 203, 1969
- The crazy kikes had their own ideas. — Mickey Spillane, Last Cop Out, p. 51, 1972
- "I’ve got that kike by the balls," said Lou [Reed], who is Jewish himself. — Lester Bangs, Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung, p. 192, 1976
- BRIAN: I’m not a Roman, Mum, and I never will be! I’m a Kike! A Yid! A Hebe! A Hook-nose! I’m Kosher, Mum! I’m a Red Sea Pedestrian, and proud of it! — Monty Python, Life of Brian, 1979
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