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 bang [bæŋ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 重击, 突然巨响, 刘海

vt. 发巨响, 重击

vi. 发巨响, 重击

ad. 砰然地, 突然巨响地, 直接地

[计] 撞击符

[医] 大麻


  1. The door shut with a bang.
    门砰的一声关上了。
  2. He fell and banged his knee.
    他跌倒了,膝盖重重撞了一下。
  3. The light went out bang in the middle of the performance.
    表演正好进行到一半时停电了。


bang
[ noun ]
  1. a vigorous blow

  2. <noun.event>
    the sudden knock floored him
    he took a bash right in his face
    he got a bang on the head
  3. a sudden very loud noise

  4. <noun.event>
  5. a border of hair that is cut short and hangs across the forehead

  6. <noun.body>
  7. the swift release of a store of affective force

  8. <noun.feeling>
    they got a great bang out of it
    what a boot!
    he got a quick rush from injecting heroin
    he does it for kicks
  9. a conspicuous success

  10. <noun.act>
    that song was his first hit and marked the beginning of his career
    that new Broadway show is a real smasher
    the party went with a bang
[ verb ]
  1. strike violently

  2. <verb.contact> slam
    slam the ball
  3. to produce a sharp often metallic explosive or percussive sound

  4. <verb.perception>
    One of them banged the sash of the window nearest my bed
  5. close violently

  6. <verb.contact>
    slam
    He slammed the door shut
  7. move noisily

  8. <verb.motion>
    The window banged shut
    The old man banged around the house
  9. have sexual intercourse with

  10. <verb.contact>
    be intimate bed bonk do it eff fuck get it on get laid have a go at it have intercourse have it away have it off have sex hump jazz know lie with love make love make out roll in the hay screw sleep together sleep with
    This student sleeps with everyone in her dorm
    Adam knew Eve
    Were you ever intimate with this man?
  11. leap, jerk, bang

  12. <verb.contact>
    spang
    Bullets spanged into the trees
[ adv ]
  1. directly

  2. <adv.all>
    he ran bang into the pole
    ran slap into her


Bang \Bang\, n.
1. A blow as with a club; a heavy blow.

Many a stiff thwack, many a bang. --Hudibras.

2. The loud sound produced by a sudden concussion or
explosion.

3. A surge of pleasure; a thrill; -- usually used in the
phrase get a bang out of; as, I always get a bang out of
watching an ice skater do a quadruple jump. [informal]

Syn: kick[5].
[PJC]

4. (Printing & Computers) An exclamation point; -- used in
verbal descriptions of text, in printing and in computer
technology; as, his email address is tom bang stanford dot
edu (i.e. tom!stanford.edu). [slang]
[PJC]

5. An instance of sexual intercourse; a fuck. Considered
vulgar and obscene. [vulgar slang]
[PJC]


Bang \Bang\ (b[a^]ng), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Banged}; p. pr. &
vb. n. {Banging}.] [Icel. banga to hammer; akin to Dan. banke
to beat, Sw. b[*a]ngas to be impetuous, G. bengel club,
clapper of a bell.]
1. To beat, as with a club or cudgel; to treat with violence;
to handle roughly.

The desperate tempest hath so banged the Turks.
--Shak.

2. To beat or thump, or to cause (something) to hit or strike
against another object, in such a way as to make a loud
noise; as, to bang a drum or a piano; to bang a door
(against the doorpost or casing) in shutting it.

3. To have sexual intercourse with; to fuck; -- usually used
with the male as a subject. Considered vulgar or obscene.
[vulgar slang]
[PJC]


Bang \Bang\, v. i.
1. To make a loud noise, as if with a blow or succession of
blows; as, the window blind banged and waked me; he was
banging on the piano.

2. To have sexual intercourse; to fuck. Considered vulgar and
obscene. [vulgar slang]
[PJC]


Bang \Bang\, v. t.
To cut squarely across, as the tail of a horse, or the
forelock of human beings; to cut (the hair).

His hair banged even with his eyebrows. --The Century
Mag.


Bang \Bang\, n.
The short, front hair combed down over the forehead, esp.
when cut squarely across; a false front of hair similarly
worn; -- usually used in the plural; as, her bangs came down
almost to her eyes.

His hair cut in front like a young lady's bang. --W. D.
Howells.


Bang \Bang\, Bangue \Bangue\, n.
See {Bhang}.

  1. Then bang, back down to depression.
  2. Trading started with a bang after the Labor Department reported the nation's unemployment rate dipped to 5.2 percent in May from April's 5.3 percent.
  3. About 45 minutes into the flight, he said, "we heard this loud bang and then it was like a huge storm.
  4. I didn't even drink," she said. "And then all of a sudden, bang!
  5. Some examples: _ Constant polling by Bush pollster Robert Teeter, involving no fewer than 1,000 calls each night, was used extensively to guide Bush's itinerary, enabling him get the most political bang from each appearance.
  6. The Metropolitan Opera's 105th season may be opening with something of a musical whimper, but it promises to end with a bang.
  7. Chairman Roger Smith will bang the gavel for the last time at General Motors Corp.'s annual meeting Friday and, perhaps fittingly, the occasion won't be without controversy.
  8. After 10 years of impressive avantgarde events in theater and music, the PepsiCo Summerfare festival is going out with a bang.
  9. "I'll probably vote for neither one," said a sister, Doris Westfall. "I'll let the rest of the county decide." It was the bang _ not the bite _ that had Jerry Dewitt jittery after tearing into an old vaccum cleaner bag.
  10. Edward I. Koch's first mayoral campaign lasted just 45 days, and ended with neither a whimper nor a bang.
  11. The season ought to conclude with a bang: On June 29 in London, Christie's will auction off another important van Gogh, entitled "Le Pont de Trinquetaille."
  12. A jobs shake-out was inevitable. Heseltine wanted to lock all the parties in a room and 'bang heads' until agreement was reached.
  13. They never meet in a place where they could bang heads on doorsills, and they don't have to endure corny comments about "How's the weather up there?" The Moonrakers Club is for tall people who prefer not to raise the roof.
  14. Physicists believe that before the big bang, the four known forces existed as a single, "unified" force, but that in the explosion, they instantaneously diverged into separate forces and matter came into being.
  15. "It's true that going into a recovery you expect to get a big bang in earnings, so price-earnings ratios aren't as important," says Leo Grohowski, head of equity investments at Marinvest, a unit of Hong Kong & Shanghai bank group.
  16. Franklin also would have given investors the biggest bang for the buck _ $10,000 invested in the company five years ago would be worth $132,528 today, Forbes said.
  17. Have a nice day." Last Wednesday, the day started literally with a bang at 8:20 a.m. when the Hogan Bank was robbed.
  18. A weeklong ban on ammunition sales that began Tuesday should make it harder to start 1991 with a bang, say authorities concerned about revelers shooting into the air New Year's Eve.
  19. "Dinosaurs didn't go out with a bang, they went out with worldwide diarrhea," he said.
  20. "It's like that old line: `This is the way the world will end, not with a bang but a wimper.'
  21. SOME presidents go out with a bang and some with a whimper.
  22. But he said Wolf had no "big bang" of revelations about his life.
  23. That leaves the Bank, which may yet have to bang heads together at the development stage.
  24. The 64-year-old Kansan began his campaign with a bang by winning the Iowa caucuses in February.
  25. Multiply the mileage, and, I would add, take in an extra 20 per cent for trips to recycling depots, and bang goes your CO reduction plan. The government will have to regulate.
  26. And unlike the big bang on the other side of the channel, this Gallic "boum" won't transform the market as 1988 begins.
  27. A men's climbing club plans to celebrate the new year with a bang atop 14,110-foot Pikes Peak, while a women's group plans a more sedate celebration on top of a nearby mountain.
  28. "The guy was a psycho, he used to bang on the walls and the ceiling," Morales said.
  29. To get more bang for their pesos, Latin American central banks persistently have undervalued the U.S. dollar; that is, they sell dollars cheaper than their real market value.
  30. The '80s have ended _ not with a bang, not with a whimper.
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