释义 |
sqush, v. U.S. colloq. and dial. rare.|skwʌʃ| [Imitative: cf. squash v.1, squdge v., squish v.] 1. intr. To collapse into a soft, pulpy mass.
1884‘Mark Twain’ Huck. Finn xxix. 303 He'd a squshed down like a bluff bank that the river has cut under. 1955E. Pound Section: Rock-Drill lxxxviii. 41 Belascio or Topaze, and not have it sqush, a ‘throne’, something God can sit on without having it sqush. b. To squelch, squeeze messily.
1929in H. Wentworth Amer. Dial. Dict. (1944) 592/1, I..‘squshed’ through many a weary mile of mud. 1949H. Hornsby Lonesome Valley xix. 249 He could take off his shoes and walk around in the mud and let the mud ooze and sqush between his toes. |