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词组 ice
释义 ice
noun
  1. diamonds UK, 1905
    • Mrs. M. wore lots of ice, which I’ll tell you about later. — Earl Wilson, I Am Gazing Into My 8-Ball, p. 23, 1945
    • They came by the dozens, loaded down with ice like it was rock candy[.] — Mezz Mezzrow, Really the Blues, p. 91, 1946
    • It’s nothing hot like you think. No ice. No emerald pendants. — Raymond Chandler, The Little Sister, p. 41, 1949
    • She was going to wear all her ice, every stone of it. — Charles Raven, Underworld Nights, p. 16, 1956
    • I knew that Jerry was Chicago’s top hot-ice dealer. — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), Trick Baby, p. 18, 1969
    • This promised to be a healthy bundle, since this was no ordinary ice mark. — Red Rudensky, The Gonif, p. 6, 1970
    • Can you move the ice afterwards? I don’t know nobody who can move ice. — Reservoir Dogs, 1992
  2. cocaine, especially in blocks US, 1971
    • Don’t get me wrong; there is some herb you know, but no rocks, no heroin or ice that I could spot. — Odie Hawkins, Midnight, p. 123, 1995
  3. smokeable amphetamine or methamphetamine US
    • It is most likely that ice is simply methamphetamine that is being marketed with an exciting new image. — Geoffrey Froner, Digging for Diamonds, p. 37, 1989
    • [A]s crack is to cocaine, so ice is to speed (methamphetamine)–the drug in a smokable, more potent crystal form. — Steven Daly and Nathaniel Wice, alt.culture, p. 109, 1995
    • Sort of a cross between smack, E and ice. You’ve got to smoke it in a little pipe. — Will Self, The Sweet Smell of Psychosis, p. 39, 1996
    • On an average night, I binge Es or ice with amyl nitrite, followed by tranx and spliffs. — Macfarlane, Macfarlane & Robson, The User, p. 91, 1996
    • Smoked in its crystalline form, speed is known as ice and produces an explosive and fucked up high, lasting for hours. — John Robb, The Nineties, p. 60, 1999
  4. heroin US
    • I was dancing with Wren at Max’s tonight (“Sympathy for the Devil”), waiting for my man (who happens to be a woman) to show with the ice[.] — Jim Carroll, Forced Entries, p. 24, 1987
  5. protection money paid by a business to criminals or by criminals to the police, US, 1887
    • The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences, p. 126, May 1950
    • Life, p. 39, 19 May 1952
    • Policemen assigned the posts the whores patrolled. Their “ice” was $1.40 a week per girl. — Lee Mortimer, Women Confidential, p. 178, 1960
    • The ice has got to stop for you, today. — Richard Condon, Prizzi’s Honor, p. 217, 1982
    • “There was ‘ice’–about seven hundred dollars a week–for the cops.” — Nicholas Pileggi, Wise Guy, p. 118, 1985
  6. a pay-off, a bribe; an added charge, US, 1968
    • That’s the first rule when it comes to paying off ice. — Madam Sherry, Pleasure Was My Business, p. 55, 1963
    • The cat gets ICE for hard to get seats for the World Series games. — Hy Lit, Hy Lit’s Unbelievable Dictionary of Hip Words for Groovy People, p. 23, 1968
  7. the difference between the listed price and the price actually paid for theatre tickets for a very popular show US
    • — Sherman Louis Sergel, The Language of Show Biz, p. 111, 1973
  8. in poker, a stacked deck US
    • — Albert H. Morehead, The Complete Guide to Winning Poker, p. 265, 1967
  9. solitary confinement in prison US, 1990
    • I was on to her and we got in a fight and I went to ice [solitary]. — Bruce Jackson, In the Life, p. 408, 1972
    • — Charles Shafer, Folk Speech in Texas Prisons, p. 207, 1990
  10. any computer program designed as a system security scheme US
    • — Christian Crumlish, The Internet Dictionary, p. 92, 1995
on ice
incarcerated US, 1931
  • — Ralph de Sola, Crime Dictionary, p. 106, 1982
  • — William K. Bentley and James M. Corbett, Prison Slang, p. 28, 1992
  • Detroit News, p. 5D, 20 September 2002
on the ice
(of a racehorse) being secretly, and illicitly, kept from running to win AUSTRALIA
  • “The others are on the ice,” it was now his turn to whisper. Oxenham was openly incredulous. “That’s rubbish,” he said. “Someone’s having you on. How could you possibly be certain they’re all dead?” — James Holledge, The Great Australian Gamble, p. 82, 1966
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