释义 |
▪ I. shoch, n. Anglo-Irish.|ʃɒx| Also shaugh, sheoch, shock, shough. [a. Irish seach ‘a turn; seach tobac, a smoke of a pipe’ (Dinneen).] A draw at a tobacco-pipe, a smoke.
1831S. Lover Leg. & Stor. Irel. Ser. i. 199 Afther gitten' an air o' the fire and a shaugh o' the pipe. 190019th Cent. July 79 Now ‘herself’— as the [Irish] husband calls her—rarely indulges in a shock of the pipe. 1901W. Barry Wizard's Knot 53 (E.D.D.) We'll..take the sheoch of a dudeen to clear our mouths of Davy Roche. ▪ II. shoch, v. Anglo-Irish.|ʃɒx| [f. prec.] intr. To draw at a tobacco-pipe, to smoke.
1898J. Macmanus Bend of Road 107 An' himself an' the Playboy shoughed out o' the same pipe! |