单词 | pong |
释义 | pongn.1int. colloquial. 1. A blow, a bang; a short, resonant, low-pitched sound. Also as int.: representing such a sound. Often contrasted with ping int. and n. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > sound of blow or fall > [noun] smitea1200 smita1425 yark1555 riprapc1580 brattlea1600 verberation1609 whack1737 whang1770 swash1789 plunk1809 tack1821 pong1823 snop1849 thunge1849 knap1870 thung1890 pow1931 thunk1952 bonk1957 the world > physical sensation > hearing and noise > degree, kind, or quality of sound > sudden or violent sound > explosive sound > [noun] clapc1440 back-blast1577 bouncea1616 blast1635 fulminating1651 fulmination1651 detonation1677 blow1694 explosion1736 bursting1771 blowing up1772 blowing1799 blow-up1807 pong1823 chunk-chunk1898 chunking1902 1823 New Monthly Mag. 8 502 [In Devon Dialect] To-day have I dealt thee a pong in the midriff. 1843 W. M. Thackeray Mr. & Mrs. Berry (1888) 294 As quick as thought, and with all his might and main—pong! he delivered a blow upon old Biggs' nose. 1896 Daily Chron. 25 Aug. 3/5 The deafening ‘pong’ of the Hotchkiss strikes on the jaded ear. 1902 Oxnard (Calif.) Courier 18 Oct. 8/2 Most any week night one can hear the pinging, pinging, pinging, of the pong, pong, pong. 1912 G. K. Chesterton Manalive ii. 41 Suddenly there came from the darkening garden a silvery ping and pong which told them that Rosamund had brought out the long-neglected mandoline. 1993 D. Sheff Game Over vii. 135 He named it ‘Pong’, after the sonar-like ‘pongs’ that sounded each time the ball made contact with the battle. 2. Also with capital initial. A proprietary name for: an early video game resembling a game of tennis or table tennis (see quot. 2000). ΘΚΠ society > leisure > entertainment > pastimes > game > other specific games > [noun] > electronic games > specific pong1976 Space Invaders1979 Pac-Man1981 Nintendo1987 Game Boy1989 1976 Washington Post 19 Apr. a15/2 (advt.) Now the whole family can play the new & exciting pong on your home TV. 1976 Billings (Montana) Gaz. 16 June 11- c/6 (advt.) The new amusement machine, Pachinco, is sweeping the country like the pong games did five years ago. 1978 Chicago June 36/1 Game room with pong and pinball machines used by neighborhood folks. 2000 S. Poole Trigger Happy ii. 33 ‘Avoid missing ball for high score’ ran the only line of instructions on Pong's cabinet. It was a very simple version of tennis. A square dot of light represented the ball, and two vertical lines at each side of the screen were the bats. Players only had to use one hand to rotate the paddle control, thus facilitating simultaneous beer consumption. The first Pong machine..was set up in..a California pool bar. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022). pongn.2 colloquial. A strong smell, usually unpleasant; a stink. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > smell and odour > fetor > [noun] > fetid smells stenchc893 reekeOE weffea1300 stink1382 fise14.. smeek?c1425 fist1440 fetorc1450 stew1487 moisture1542 putor1565 pouant1602 funk1606 graveolence1623 hogo1654 whiff1668 fogo1794 stythe1823 malodour1825 pen and ink1859 body scent1875 pong1900 niffa1903 hum1906 taint1927 honk1953 bowf1985 stank1996 1900 Marvel 21 Dec. 15 The pong of fride addocks. 1919 W. H. Downing Digger Dial. 38 Pong,..stink. 1925 E. Fraser & J. Gibbons Soldier & Sailor Words 226 Pong, a stink. 1936 F. Clune Roaming round Darling xxiv. 257 Avoid the smell of camel. They were complete with permanent, pyramid, and perfume, commonly called pong. 1941 S. J. Baker Pop. Dict. Austral. Slang 56 Ponk, a stink. As verb, to stink. 1957 J. Braine Room at Top iv. 44 ‘What a pong,’ he said. ‘Don't know how you stand it.’ 1991 D. Coupland Generation X i. i. 4 Smelling the cinnamon nighttime pong of snapdragons and efficient whiffs of swimming pool chlorine. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2006; most recently modified version published online June 2022). Pongn.3 slang (chiefly Australian, usually derogatory and offensive). A Chinese person. Also occasionally: a Japanese person. ΘΚΠ the world > people > nations > native or inhabitant of Asia > the Chinese > [noun] > native or inhabitant of China Cathayan?1520 Chinean1577 Son of Heaven1579 Chino1588 chinois1594 Chinese1606 Chinesianc1615 Chinaman1621 China1638 Chinist1654 Chinensian1655 pigtail1823 celestial1842 Johnny1844 coolie1849 John1853 Chinky1871 chow1872 Chink1880 monk1903 Pong1910 power point1986 1906 Truth (Sydney) 28 Oct. 11/1 To-day there are 20 whites to 150 Ah Pongs.] 1910 Bulletin (Sydney) 1 Sept. 13/4 A fat, full-blooded Pong got into the compartment. 1931 V. Palmer Separate Lives 221 Blow into one of those Chow joints..and call for a dollar's worth of duck and fowl. Enough for two those pongs always give you. 1938 X. Herbert Capricornia 339 Your grandmother was a lubra and your grandfather was a Pong. 1957 D. Stivens Scholarly Mouse 65 He was too tall to be a Pong or an Eyetoe. 1962 J. Franklyn Dict. Nicknames 86/1 Pong is a nickname given to a Chinaman in Australia—punning the ong sound in some Chinese words, and pong, a bad smell. 1970 ‘B. Mather’ Break in Line i. 11 I'm the only Pong I know who wouldn't say Charling Closs. 1985 N. Medcalf Rifleman 18 Me and that Pong..I got him. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2006; most recently modified version published online June 2022). pongn.4 U.S. slang. rare. Table tennis; = ping-pong n.1 1. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > sport > types of sport or game > ball game > table tennis or ping-pong > [noun] table tennis1891 ping-pong1900 pong1968 1968 Current Slang (Univ. S. Dakota) 3 i. 10 Pong, ping-pong. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022). pongv.1 Theatre slang. Now rare. transitive. Of an actor: to amplify or expand (the text of a part); to speak (lines) loudly, to project, declaim. Cf. gag v.1 5. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > acting > act [verb (intransitive)] > amplify part gag1853 to feed a part1892 pong1893 1893 Clarion Summer 30 Ponging is a lost art... Consisting as it did, of a kind of bold free-hand dramatic sketching, Ponging had no place in an age of ‘photographic acting’. Hence we pong no more. 1894 Evening News 18 Oct. 2/6 If he expands the text he is said ‘to pong’... Why will not ‘gag’ do instead of ‘pong’? 1923 F. J. Wilstack Stage Dict. in N.Y. Times 9 Sept. vii. 2 Pong; Equivalent to expounding a part. 1958 Times 14 Oct. 3/2 Shaw, whose lines must be ‘ponged’ (given maximum projection). This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2006; most recently modified version published online March 2022). pongv.2 colloquial. intransitive. To smell strongly, esp. unpleasantly; to stink of something. Also figurative. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > smell and odour > fetor > stink [verb (intransitive)] stinkc725 stenchc950 to-stinka1382 smella1400 savour?1440 stew1563 reek1609 funk1694 pen-and-ink1892 whiff1899 niff1900 hum1902 pong1906 honk1959 1906 Marvel 29 Dec. 676 In its time many things had been tumbled into it, and each had left its flavour behind. ‘It pongs!’ said Mr. Histed. 1927 W. E. Collinson Contemp. Eng. 23 Things didn't smell, but ponged, niffed or hummed. 1944 ‘N. Shute’ Pastoral ii. 17 I think it looks ugly as sin, and it's starting to ponk a bit. 1950 A. Baron There's No Home i. 16 ‘It don't 'alf pong,’ he observed. 1972 P. Cleife Slick & Dead ii. 22 This loving thing could be a cover story for any old racket?.. Pongs a bit, don't you think? 1990 ‘J. Gash’ Very Last Gambado (1991) iv. 31 All barkers pong of armpit. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2006; most recently modified version published online June 2022). < n.1int.1823n.21900n.31910n.41968v.11893v.21906 |
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