释义 |
both ways noun- a wager that a selected horse, dog, etc will finish a race in the first three UK, 1869
Also heard as “each way”. - a bet in craps both that the shooter will win and that the shooter will lose US
In craps, gamblers can bet that the shooter will win, that he will lose, or both. - — The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences, p. 120, May 1950
▶ go both ways- to be bisexual US, 1988
- “Two of the guys went both ways, she told me.” — Roger Blake, Love Clubs, Inc., p. 149, 1967
- You trying to tell me if I don’t like spiders it means I go both ways? — Freaky Deaky, p. 30, 1988
- to be willing to play both the active and passive role in homosexual sex US
- All the punks go both ways, the queens don’t. — Bruce Jackson, In the Life, p. 400, 1972
- “Some guys go both ways, stud. No offense.” He retreats. — John Rechy, Rushes, p. 99, 1979
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