释义 |
New-ˈYorky, a. [-y1.] Suggestive or characteristic of New York.
1908E. Wharton Hermit 150 To be compared to her! to be accused of being ‘New-Yorky’! 1963Guardian 25 Jan. 6/6 The ‘Partisan’, New York-y too, but out of a cosmopolitan liberal intelligentsia. 1973R. L. Simon Big Fix (1974) ix. 66 The accent was nasal and New Yorky, the voice scratchy. |