释义 |
‖ pasear, v. and n. slang and U.S. dial.|paseˈar| [See paseo.] A. v. intr. To take a paseo or walk. B. n. = paseo. Also attrib.
1840R. H. Dana Two Yrs. before Mast xxviii. 313 He was going to paseár with our captain a little. 1847Calif. Star (San Francisco) 24 July 2/3, I am told this pasear over the mountains, will cost the Commodore [Stockton] five thousand dollars. 1878B. Harte Man on Beach 112, I was reck'nin' on taking a little pasear with you. 1892Stevenson & Osbourne Wrecker xii. 192, I tell you, Mr. Dodd, it was a queer thing to see me and the old lady taking a pasear in the garden, and the old man scowling at us over the pickets. 1903Conrad & Hueffer Romance iii. iii. 141, I just come from taking a pasear that way. 1914Sunset July 64/1 It was the pasear madness that made despairing feet give way to auto tires—it is the undiminishing nature of pasear joys that is stretching the eighteen-million-dollar highway through the state. 1948Popular Western June 16/2 Yuh're takin' a little pasear to the penitentiary in Walla Walla. |