punk
punk 英 [pʌŋk] 美 [pʌŋk]
n. 废物;小阿飞;年轻无知的人 adj. 朋客,崩客;无用的,低劣的
名词复数:punks
- A punk is a young troublemaker. If your elderly neighbor thinks of you as a young punk, he either thinks all kids are bad — or you did something that really disturbed him.
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- n. 废物;小阿飞;年轻无知的人
- adj. 朋客,崩客;无用的,低劣的
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1. For example, you might associate someone with a "Mohawk" with the "punk" scene.
比如,你可以在"朋客式"的地点与一个"莫霍克人"来往。
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2. With big 80s hair, the neon shades and the slingshot, she’s probably the most "punk rock" of this bunch.
有着大大的80后的发型,氖阴影和弹弓,她或许这群人中最有朋克风格的一任。
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3. As in other places, being punk in Beijing can mean many things.
如同在别的地方,在北京当朋克可以意味着许多东西。
- punk (adj.) "inferior, bad," 1896, also as a noun, "something worthless," earlier "rotten wood used as tinder" (1680s), "A word in common use in New England, as well as in the other Northern States and Canada" [Bartlett]; perhaps from Delaware (Algonquian) ponk, literally "dust, powder, ashes;" but Gaelic spong "tinder" also has been suggested (compare spunk "touchwood, tinder," 1580s).
- punk (n.1) "Chinese incense," 1870, from punk (adj.).
- punk (n.2) "worthless person" (especially a young hoodlum), 1917, probably from punk kid "criminal's apprentice," underworld slang first attested 1904 (with overtones of "catamite"). Ultimately from punk (adj.) "inferior, bad" (q.v.), or else from punk "prostitute, harlot, strumpet," first recorded 1590s, of unknown origin.
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