单词 | jeff |
释义 | jeffn.1 Circus slang. A rope. ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > equipment > building and constructing equipment > fastenings > [noun] > rope, cord, or line stringa900 soleOE funela1400 tow1513 rope1720 tug1805 thews1851 jeff1854 1854 C. Dickens Hard Times i. vi. 37 Tight-Jeff or Slack-Jeff, it don't much signify: it's only tight-rope and slack-rope. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1900; most recently modified version published online March 2022). jeffn.2 A derogatory term for a man, usually a ‘hick’ or a bore; esp. used by black Americans of white men. Also attributive, as jeff artist, jeff hat. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > suffering > feeling of weariness or tedium > [noun] > tedious or dull person grub1653 noddeea1680 insipid1699 rocker1762 bore1812 Dryasdust1819 insipidity1822 prose1844 bagpipe1850 vampire1862 pill1865 jeff1870 terebrant1890 poop1893 stodger1905 club bore1910 nudnik1916 stodge1922 dreary1925 dreep1927 binder1930 drip1932 douchebag1946 drear1958 drag1959 noodge1968 anorak1984 the world > people > person > man > [noun] churla800 werec900 rinkeOE wapmanc950 heOE wyeOE gomeOE ledeOE seggeOE shalkOE manOE carmanlOE mother bairnc1225 hemea1250 mother sona1250 hind1297 buck1303 mister mana1325 piecec1325 groomc1330 man of mouldc1330 hathela1350 sire1362 malea1382 fellowa1393 guestc1394 sergeant?a1400 tailarda1400 tulka1400 harlotc1405 mother's sona1470 frekea1475 her1488 masculinea1500 gentlemana1513 horse?a1513 mutton?a1513 merchant1549 child1551 dick1553 sorrya1555 knavea1556 dandiprat1556 cove1567 rat1571 manling1573 bird1575 stone-horse1580 loona1586 shaver1592 slave1592 copemate1593 tit1594 dog1597 hima1599 prick1598 dingle-dangle1605 jade1608 dildoa1616 Roger1631 Johnny1648 boy1651 cod1653 cully1676 son of a bitch1697 cull1698 feller1699 chap1704 buff1708 son of a gun1708 buffer1749 codger1750 Mr1753 he-man1758 fella1778 gilla1790 gloak1795 joker1811 gory1819 covey1821 chappie1822 Charley1825 hombre1832 brother-man1839 rooster1840 blokie1841 hoss1843 Joe1846 guy1847 plug1848 chal1851 rye1851 omee1859 bloke1861 guffin1862 gadgie1865 mug1865 kerel1873 stiff1882 snoozer1884 geezer1885 josser1886 dude1895 gazabo1896 jasper1896 prairie dog1897 sport1897 crow-eater1899 papa1903 gink1906 stud1909 scout1912 head1913 beezer1914 jeff1917 pisser1918 bimbo1919 bozo1920 gee1921 mush1936 rye mush1936 basher1942 okie1943 mugger1945 cat1946 ou1949 tess1952 oke1970 bra1974 muzhik1993 1870 O. Logan Before Footlights 202 I thought perhaps they imagined I was a female Jeff Davis, and were going to make a ‘charge a la bayonette’ instanter. 1917 E. E. Cummings Let. 4 June (1969) 26 I escaped repairing with the bums, mutts and Jeffs. 1938 C. Calloway Hi De Ho 16 Jeff, a pest, a bore, an icky. 1946 M. Mezzrow & B. Wolfe Really Blues Gloss. 375/1 Jeff Davis, an unenlightened person, a hick from down South; sometimes shortened to jeff. 1954 L. V. Berrey & M. Van den Bark Amer. Thes. Slang (ed. 2) 391/3 Jeff Davis, jeff, a Southern ‘hick’. 1969 Publ. Amer. Dial. Soc. li. 29 Names used exclusively by Negroes..jeff, jeffer, jeff davis, jeff artist. 1970 C. Major Dict. Afro-Amer. Slang 70 Jeff,..a white person;..a dull person; a horrible square. 1973 Black World Apr. 57 He wears a jeff hat and a light raincoat. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1900; most recently modified version published online March 2021). jeffv. Printers' slang. intransitive. ‘To throw or gamble with quadrats as with dice’ (Jacobi Printers' Vocab. 1888). ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > games of chance > dice-playing > play at dice [verb (intransitive)] taveleOE dicec1440 rifle1590 to shake the elbow1705 jeff1837 to touch ivory1864 to roll (the, them) bones1891 1837 Baltimore Commercial Transcript 7 Nov. 2/1 We move that the printers of the U.S. divide off in halves, and ‘jeff’ to see which shall go to digging ditches or picking stone coal for a living. 1841 W. Savage Dict. Art of Printing 428 Jeff. See Throw. 1884 J. Gould Letter-press Printer (ed. 3) 166/1 Jeff, to throw for a choice with quadrats instead of dice. 1888 Amer. Humorist (Farmer) He never set any type except in the rush of the last day, and then he would smouch all the poetry, and leave the rest to jeff for the solid takes. 1942 L. V. Berrey & M. Van den Bark Amer. Thes. Slang § 526 Jeff, to play dice with em quadrates. Derivatives ˈjeffing n. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > games of chance > dice-playing > [noun] > dicing dice-playc1440 dicing1456 dice-playingc1490 elbow-shaking1850 dice-box1857 jeffing1875 1875 J. Southward Dict. Typogr. (ed. 2) 58 Jeffing, throwing with quads... One of..[the party interested] takes up the quads, shakes them..and throws them..after the manner of throwing dice, when the number of quads with the nicks appearing uppermost are counted,..the highest thrower being the winner. 1892 A. Powell Southward's Pract. Printing (ed. 4) lxv. 577 In the old companionship system, the fat [sc. easy work] is distributed by ‘jeffing’, or ‘throwing quads’. 1947 E. Howe London Compositor 24 A custom [sc. playing at quadrats] known in the nineteenth century as ‘Jeffing’. 1967 F. J. M. Wijnekus Elsevier's Dict. Printing & Allied Industries 177/2 Jeffing, gambling with nine one-em quadrats, i.e., to throw quards [sic] like dice, using the nick side, appearing uppermost, representing one and the other sides blanks. It is a very old custom, but now almost entirely out of practice. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1900; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.11854n.21870v.1837 |
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