释义 |
dick verb- to exploit; to take advantage of; to harm US, 1964
In the 1968 US presidential election, the bumper sticker “Dick Nixon Before Nixon Dicks You” raised eyebrows. - I got them on one side, I got La Cos Nostra on the other, I got more people trying to dick me than if I turned tricks for a living. — Elmore Leonard, Glitz, p. 289, 1985
- Compared to other law firms, Kipper Garth’s had the overhead problem dicked. — Carl Hiaasen, Skin Tight, p. 89, 1989
- Time to play let’s dick the old guys, huh, Harp? — Point Break, 1991
- The club owner is trying to dick me out of some money. — Wayne’s World, 1992
- I know not to dick with him when it comes to matters PC. — Armistead Maupin, Maybe the Moon, p. 163, 1992
- DON’T DICK WITH YOUR DICK! — Richard Herring, Talking Cock, p. 236, 2003
- You know I haven’t seen a dime off that shit. I’ve been dicked! — FHM, p. 222, June 2003
- (from the male point of view) to have sex with US, 1942
- I dicked her here in Pussycat where the coffin sets. — Pietro Di Donato, Naked Author, p. 294, 1970
- He said, “Did I ask him, you want to know, if he’s dicking her? No, I didn’t.” — Elmore Leonard, Split Images, p. 16, 1981
- Shark, a newcomer to dicking onstage, comes from Cuba, perhaps a gift from Castro’s boat-people exchange. — Josh Alan Friedman, Tales of Times Square, p. 189, 1986
- Beat her in the day and dicked her little hole at night. — David Shorey, Flares and Other Motor Episodes, p. 240, 2001
- to look UK
A variation of DECKO; DEKKO- Dick at the gorger’s conkie. — Patrick O’Shaughnessy, Market Traders’ Slang, 1979
|