释义 |
ice verb- to kill US, 1941
- “You’re gonna end up in a bag, fool,” the man said. “If that’s the case,” Hicks said, “I better ice you fellas.” — Robert Stone, Dog Soldiers, p. 101, 1974
- Word was he had already iced some greaseball in the Bronx whose bail had dropped too low. — Edwin Torres, Carlito’s Way, p. 22, 1975
- And in making my exit, I iced a cop / ‘Cause the motherfucker shot at me when I wouldn’t stop. — Dennis Wepman et al., The Life, p. 118, 1976
- I was in the news media and I was charged with “icing,” as the prisoners say, a supsected agent of the CIA or FBI. — Bobby Seale, A Lonely Rage, p. 269, 1978
- [H]is father had been unable to figure out any other way to ice Little Phil Terrone, the heaviest shit and boo dealer in the North Bronx. — Richard Condon, Prizzi’s Honor, p. 4, 1982
- Manny whispered in English, “If they draw, ice them.” — Joseph Wambaugh, Lines and Shadows, p. 310, 1984
- It’s them Brennan shitehawks that’s getting iced. — Kevin Sampson, Clubland, p. 246, 2002
- to place in solitary confinement US, 1933
- — Clarence Major, Dictionary of Afro-American Slang, p. 69, 1970
- to ignore with a vengeance US, 1932
- — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, p. 4, Fall 1987
- to give up; to stop US, 1962
- And this time, I want you to ice the rubber and let him get a shot of pure honey. — A.S. Jackson, Gentleman Pimp, p. 47, 1973
- to reject; to stand up US
- — Pamela Munro, U.C.L.A. Slang, p. 80, 1997
▶ ice it- to stop doing something US
- — Stewart L. Tubbs and Sylvia Moss, Human Communication, p. 121, 1974
- to forget something US
- — San Francisco Examiner, p. III-2, 22 March 1960
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