释义 |
dig out verb- to work cheerfully and with a will; to make a real effort UK
Military usage. - — Nigel Foster, The Making of a Royal Marine Commando, 1987
- to taunt, to insult UK
- I was so nervous of Jim Irwin digging me out in front of them that I stood behind the settee like a big dummy. — Lenny McLean, The Guv’nor, p. 19, 1998
- in trucking, to start fast US
- — Montie Tak, Truck Talk, p. 44, 1971
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