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单词 boff
释义

boffn.1adj.

Brit. /bɒf/, U.S. /bɑf/
Origin: Probably an imitative or expressive formation.
Etymology: Probably imitative. Compare slightly earlier boff v., and also baff n.1, biff n. With use as adjective, compare earlier boffo adj.1 Compare also boffo n.1, boffo adj.2It is uncertain whether there is any connection with the following (recorded only from Yorkshire):1898 Eng. Dial. Dict. I. 324/2 Boff.., an alarm, a sudden shock. In senses A. 1 and A. 2, originally associated with the U.S. entertainment-industry magazine Variety.
slang (originally and chiefly U.S.).
A. n.1
1. A blow, a punch. Also figurative.
ΚΠ
1921 ‘Con.’ in Variety 8 Apr. 7/5 Tomato..socked Pepper on the button with a boff that you could hear all over the buildin.
1944 D. Runyon in Collier's 15 Jan. 53/2 I quietly gave Girondel a boff over his pimple with a blackjack.
1991 HP Professional June 12/3 So what effect have all these biffs, boffs and product moves had on Sun?
2001 Times-Picayune (New Orleans) (Nexis) 18 Feb. (Metro section) 9 Spectators report that Jones in return received a boff on the chin, so maybe Plotkin got inside and nailed him with an uppercut.
2. In the entertainment industry: a great success, a hit. Cf. boffo n.2 Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > prosperity > success > [noun] > one who or that which is successful > that which is successful > and popular
catch-on1895
boff1943
boffo1950
top of the pops1956
1943 Variety 19 May 8/1 Only in one musical number is she [sc. Betty Grable] a boff.
1946 Time 21 Jan. 70 Such trade phrases as ‘boff’ (a variation of sock or punch) for smash hit, ‘preem’, as a verb meaning to stage a première.
1984 N.Y. Times (Nexis) 24 Aug. a10/1 (heading) Nancy Reagan film a boff. The hall waxed romantic when the film tribute to Nancy Reagan was shown.
3. Sexual intercourse; an instance of this. Hence: a sexual partner, esp. a woman.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual partner > [noun] > specifically female
boff1956
root1961
poke1968
tumble1970
the world > physical sensation > sexual relations > sexual activity > [noun] > sexual intercourse > an act of
swivec1560
fall1594
sleep1612
fuck1663
merry bout1780
stroke1785
screw?c1845
charver1846
fuckeea1866
sex act1888
frigc1890
grind1893
mount1896
poke1902
tumble1903
screwing1904
ride1905
roll1910
trick1926
lay1932
jump1934
bang1937
knock1937
shag1937
a roll in the hay1945
boff1956
naughty1959
root1961
shtup1964
home run1967
seeing to1970
legover1975
bonk1978
zatch1980
boink1989
1956 S. Longstreet Real Jazz viii. 62 So no more legal boff and soon, no more legal booze.
1961 J. Heller Catch-22 xxxviii. 394 I thought I might as well give the stupid broad another boff just for old time's sake.
1973 B. Hirschfeld Generation of Victors xxx. 237 Bet she's a great boff.
1977 P. Hamill Flesh & Blood xxiv. 203 Hell, I'd like to give you a boff, boy.
1994 Ottawa Citizen 2 Nov. b7/1 The series has become a rutting, panting soap opera. It might be subtitled A Boff in the Buff in Banff.
B. adj.
In the entertainment industry: designating or relating to a commercial hit; hugely successful, spectacular, excellent. Cf. boffo adj.1
ΚΠ
1945 Variety 18 July 34/1 Jule Styne and Sammy Cahn cleffed five new numbers, three of which are given the Frank Sinatra treatment for boff results.
1959 Guardian 14 Oct. 7/3 The ‘boff’ technique beloved of Broadway in the pre-Oklahoma days, so that principals and chorus are lined up facing the audience, arms extended, grins frozen, as the music hits a crescendo on the last line.
1981 Forbes (Nexis) 12 Oct. 20 They'll bite all the hands that feed them if it pays at the box office. If it's boff, barf matters not.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, March 2002; most recently modified version published online December 2021).

boffn.2

Brit. /bɒf/, U.S. /bɑf/
Origin: Formed within English, by clipping or shortening. Etymon: boffo n.1
Etymology: Shortened < boffo n.1, but perhaps also influenced by boff n.1
slang (originally and chiefly U.S.).
Originally and chiefly in the entertainment industry: a hearty or unrestrained laugh; a joke, esp. one which elicits uproarious or uncontainable laughter. Cf. boffo n.1
ΘΚΠ
the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > types of laughter > [noun] > a deep unrestrained laugh
belly-laugh1921
boffo1934
boff1945
the mind > emotion > pleasure > laughter > causing laughter > [noun] > jest or pleasantry > a jest or joke > uproariously funny
side-splitter1834
gut-buster1929
boff1945
boffola1946
thigh-slapper1965
knee-slapper1966
1945 in H. Wentworth & S. B. Flexner Dict. Amer. Slang (1960) 49/2 Always trying for a boff..a laugh.
1946 Hollywood Q. 1 364/2 This has resulted in a wave of reaction throughout the industry against the type of cartoons known as ‘Rembrandts’; that is, any type of cartoon except those based on the ‘boff’ or belly laugh.
1955 S. J. Perelman Let. 15 Dec. in Don't tread on Me (1987) 182 The obligation to prepare at least sixty pages of boffs had become a nightmare.
1965 People (Austral.) 21 Jan. 21/1 A classic example of what is known in the laugh trade as ‘the boff’ (the great gust of laughter following a split second after the point of the gag is seen).
1987 Washington Post (Nexis) 22 May e4 But I still got a big boff out of the bumper sticker mine eyes saw the glory of on River Road.
1999 Corpus Christi (Texas) Caller-Times (Nexis) 9 Sept. b6 I don't work for giggles, I work for boffs, real belly laughs. My real criteria is that everybody must understand the joke at the same time.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, March 2002; most recently modified version published online December 2021).

boffn.3

Brit. /bɒf/, U.S. /bɑf/
Origin: Formed within English, by clipping or shortening. Etymon: boffin n.
Etymology: Shortened < boffin n.
slang (originally and chiefly British).
= boffin n.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > understanding > intelligence, cleverness > intellectual superiority > [noun] > intellectual person
illuminate1602
intellectualist1605
intelligence1648
intellectual1652
aerialist1778
intellect1842
intellectuality1863
cerebralist1890
highbrow1898
longhair1920
egghead1952
boffin1954
boff1984
1984 P. Beale Partridge's Dict. Slang (ed. 8) 109/1 Boff, short for boffin.
1989 Independent 2 Nov. 36/1 The new album was recorded in LA with a predictable assortment of session boffs.
1994 Observer 13 Mar. (Life Suppl.) 8/2 All the grammar school boffs, the scholars and the pointy-heads.
1997 DJ 30 Aug. 19 The latter [game program] is a device of more serious capabilities which the pair will be using on tour and studio boffs will eagerly clutch to their bosom.
2000 Business Times (S. Afr.) (Nexis) 16 July 19 The technical boffs are poring over their charts to see if there is another 20 points of profit still to come.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, March 2002; most recently modified version published online December 2021).

boffv.

Brit. /bɒf/, U.S. /bɑf/
Origin: Probably an imitative or expressive formation.
Etymology: Probably imitative. Compare boff n.1, and also earlier baff v.2, biff v., buff v.1 In sense 2 compare bonk v. 3.
slang.
1. transitive. Originally and chiefly U.S. To hit, strike; esp. to beat (a person) on the head. Also with off.
ΚΠ
1918 Stenotypists' Compan. Aug. 13 ‘It is all a big game. I am going out there to fight, and if I am not good enough or am unlucky I may get “boffed off”.’ That is the way this game of air duels goes.
1930 D. Runyon Hottest Guy in World in Liberty 8 Nov. 24/1 He never misses a chance to push Big Jule around, and sometimes boffs Big Jule over the bean with his blackjack.
1954 J. Thompson Hell of Woman xi. 80 I wanted to boff hell out of the old bitch, and I just couldn't move.
1967 J. Speicher Looking for Baby Paradise iii. 41 One..might..boff you with [a] picket sign.
1981 Christian Sci. Monitor (Nexis) 21 May b13 Two grayish-green turtles are performing the rite of spring. He nuzzles her turtle neck, she boffs him away with a flipper.
1995 Daily Mail 28 Feb. 22/4 During the struggle Knights was ‘boffed’ on the head.
2. transitive and intransitive. Originally U.S. To have sexual intercourse (with).Although used with the same meaning, in Britain this sense of boff seems to carry a different register. While in America the usage is regarded as relatively coarse, in Britain it is often used somewhat euphemistically, like the similar bonk v.
ΚΠ
1937 J. Weidman I can get it for you Wholesale i. 6 You wouldn't even let me take time out to get boffed.
1968 G. Vidal Myra Breckinridge xxvii. 122 Why, just the thought of boffing some hairy boy makes me sick all over.
1982 Observer 31 Jan. 48/7 While Dora and Toby are boffing beneath the bell, there is a rustle in the shrubbery.
1993 Rolling Stone 14 Oct. 128/4 He never met a nurse under 40 he didn't boff.
2000 Nation 10 July 44/3 Her boyfriend..enjoys lording it over the cop as much as he likes boffing Domino.

Derivatives

ˈboffing n. (a) masturbation (rare); (b) (an act of) sexual intercourse.
ΚΠ
1949 E. Partridge Dict. Slang (ed. 3) Add. 995/2 Boffing, masturbation.
1977 Washington Post (Nexis) 4 Sept. g1 Much talk of ‘boffing’.
1990 J. Updike Rabbit at Rest ii. 257 Dad, when are you going to get your mind off boffing?
1997 D. Hansen Sole Survivor xiv. 164 Take her out and give her a darn good boffing. That'll do the trick.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, March 2002; most recently modified version published online December 2021).
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n.1adj.1921n.21945n.31984v.1918
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