释义 |
lug noun- a large, clumsy, dim man US, 1927
- Then try to get hold of me and maybe we can ambush the lug. — Mickey Spillane, I, The Jury, p. 89, 1947
- I need you to run interference with the lug. Make some small talk with him or something. — Mallrats, 1995
- Elliot would walk in and Andy would say, “Hi, you big lug,” Or he’d say, “Hi stranger. New in town?” — Elmore Leonard, Be Cool, p. 305, 1999
- a woman who takes lesbian lovers in college and then reverts to heterosexuality after graduation from college US
An abbreviation of “lesbian until graduation”. - There is even a new term–“lugs,” lesbians until graduation. — New York Times, p. 7, 5 June 1993
- — Steven Daly and Nalthaniel Wice, alt.culture, p. 138, 1995
- — Don R. McCreary (Editor), Dawg Speak, 2001
- the ear UK, 1507
- — Lou Shelly, Hepcats Jive Talk Dictionary, p. 13, 1945
- Gravy [blood] came out his hooter [nose] and his lugs. — Jeremy Cameron, Brown Bread in Wengen, p. 5, 1999
- They were trying to cut his lugs off but the scissors kept on folding over. — Lanre Fehintola, Charlie Says..., p. 75, 2000
- an inhalation of marijuana smoke, especially from a water pipe UK
- [T]ake a lug, feel the buzz[.] — Macfarlane, Macfarlane and Robson, The User, p. 39, 1996
- Contemplation is the musical equivalent of taking a far-larger-than-is-probably-wise lug from a bong[.] — Ministry, May 2002
- a demand US, 1929
- I’m hip to the ways you pimps try to play / And the lugs you drop on a frail. — Dennis Wepman et al., The Life, p. 86, 1976
- luggage US
- — Ramon Adams, The Language of the Railroader, p. 96, 1977
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