释义 |
Luke the Gook noun during the Korean war, a north Korean; during the Vietnam war, any Vietnamese person US, 1953 War usage.- Yet everyone knew he was there–Old Joe Chink, Luke the Gook, the enemy. — T. R. Fehrenbach, This Kind of War, p. 432, 1963
- I had come to view the enemy in Vietnam as a real monster, as a threat to my personal security, something which had to be stopped and squashed. Phrases like “gook” and “link the chink” and “luke the gook,” stuff we used in training got solidly into my head. — John Kerry, The New Soldier, p. 96, 1971
- They called him Luke the Gook, and after that no one wanted anything to happen to him. — Michael Herr, Dispatches, p. 126, 1977
- — Linda Reinberg, In the Field, p. 131, 1991
|