释义 |
crowd-surfing, n. orig. Canad. Brit. |ˈkraʊdsəːfɪŋ|, U.S. |ˈkraʊdˌsərfɪŋ| [‹ crowd n.3 + surfing n. Compare slightly later crowd-surf v.] The action of lying flat while being passed over the heads of members of the audience at a rock concert, typically after jumping into the audience from the stage. Cf. stage-diving n. at stage n. Additions
1989Globe & Mail (Toronto) 20 Nov. c7/4 The music is a barrage of stampeding time trials inspiring live audiences to excesses of stage-diving and crowd-surfing. 1992New Musical Express 29 Aug. 42/3 She sprawls offstage in a celebratory show of crowd-surfing. 2002N.Y. Times (National ed.) 1 Sept. ix. 6/1 The area up front was an impassable scrum of teenagers, their ardor only slightly dampened by signs forbidding crowd surfing. |