释义 |
ˈway-in, a. slang. [f. way adv. + in adv., after way out a.] Conventional; fashionable, sophisticated.
1960N.Y. Times Mag. 12 June 19/1 A famous lady columnist with a way-out taste in millinery but a way-in taste in film fare. Ibid. 78/4 Many artists..have sought refuge in..way-in or way-out religious conversions. 1967Punch 29 Nov. 817/2 There's a real way-in guy looking like how a guy on The Times Saturday Review ought to look like. |