Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Snow Crash choose

Quotation Text

[US] N. Stephenson Snow Crash (1993) 158: Y.T. wants to ask him how he went from the ultimate rebellion to running the family beeswax.
at beeswax, n.2
[US] N. Stephenson Snow Crash (1993) 312: Nothing in the world like it, nosireebob.
at no siree (bob)!, excl.
[US] N. Stephenson Snow Crash (1993) 72: We were just fooling around at this arcade on the Street. Pretty bumpin’.
at bumping, adj.
[US] N. Stephenson Snow Crash (1993) 72: If I get popped, you’re supposed to come round and help bust me out.
at bust out, v.2
[US] N. Stephenson Snow Crash (1993) 72: Especially now that they have black, Hispanic, and Asian capos who will respect your cultural identity?
at capo, n.
[US] N. Stephenson Snow Crash (1993) 142: Urban gardeners. Chinese peasants who do the grunt work for ’em.
at grunt work (n.) under grunt, n.
[US] N. Stephenson Snow Crash (1993) 72: Affixed me to the gate of White Columns with a loogie gun.
at loogie, n.
[US] N. Stephenson Snow Crash (1993) 72: ‘’Sup with you?’ ‘Maxing The Clink.’ ‘Whoa! Who popped you?’.
at max, v.
[US] N. Stephenson Snow Crash (1993) 72: Jason is bullish on the Mob.
at mob, n.2
[US] N. Stephenson Snow Crash (1993) 108: Some Yankee pencilneck is looking down his nose at him.
at pencil-neck, n.
[US] N. Stephenson Snow Crash (1993) 8: The retards and the bimbo boxes poke along, random, indecisive.
at poke (along) (v.) under poke, v.
[US] N. Stephenson Snow Crash (1993) 293: Early thrashers used to inadvertently skate into walls of glass.
at thrasher, n.
[US] N. Stephenson Snow Crash (1993) 8: That means high turnover for him, fast action, keep moving that ’za.
at za, n.
[US] D. Cronenburg Crash [film script] He helps haul a still-groggy Seagrave off the road and into the woods.
at groggy, adj.
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