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单词 twoc
释义

twocn.

Brit. /twɒk/, U.S. /twɑk/
Forms: 1900s– TWOC, 1900s– Twoc, 1900s– twoc.
Origin: Formed within English, as an acronym. Etymon: English taking without owner's consent.
Etymology: Acronym < the initial letters of taking without owner's consent.Compare:1968 Theft Act c. 60 § 12 (1) A person shall be guilty of an offence if, without having the consent of the owner or other lawful authority, he takes any conveyance for his own or another's use or, knowing that any conveyance has been taken without such authority, drives it or allows himself to be carried in or on it.
British slang (originally Police slang).
The offence of taking a car without the owner's consent, esp. for the purpose of joy-riding; (an instance of) car theft. Cf. TDA n. at T n. Additions.The original implication of the acronym is that the offence centres on cars stolen for joyriding, then subsequently abandoned. However, the term often encompasses outright theft.
ΚΠ
1972 MS Entry 20 Oct. in Police Notebk. (Durham Constabulary) (O.E.D. Archive) 5 Arrested [him], 17 yrs. Suspected T.W.O.C.
1977 D. Winn Murder Ink 321/2 T.W.O.C., Taking Without Owner's Consent (spoken as ‘twock’): unlawfully borrowing a motor vehicle (‘I arrested two men for T.W.O.C.’).
1990 Oxf. Times 27 July 15/2 Twoc—to rhyme with ‘clock’—is police shorthand for the offence of taking and driving away a vehicle without its owner's consent... From the victim's point of view, ‘only a twoc’ has a very hollow ring to it.
1992 Police Rev. 17 Jan. 130/1 This rather peculiar Bill..deals with the basic TWOC offence where the vehicle was driven dangerously or was damaged or was driven in a way which led to personal injury or damage to property.
2002 Evening Chron. (Newcastle) (Electronic ed.) 19 Mar. Other charges have also been made for car crime including theft and TWOC.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, June 2003; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

twocv.

Brit. /twɒk/, U.S. /twɑk/
Forms: 1900s– twoc, 1900s– TWOC, 1900s– twock, 1900s– twok.
Origin: Formed within English, by conversion. Etymon: twoc n.
Etymology: < twoc n. Compare twocked adj. and slightly earlier twocker n., twocking n.
British slang (originally Police slang).
transitive. To steal (a car), esp. for the purpose of joy-riding. Also intransitive.
ΚΠ
1993 Guardian 20/3 It is clearly absurd if children who are..‘twoccing’ (taking away cars without consent) are coming before the magistrates only to be sent off to carry on..twoccing.
1998 Viz June 45 That cheeky face says it all. He's just twokked his very first car!
2001 Max Power Dec. 53/2 Don't label all of us with the same brush, as me and my mate don't TWOC cars, we just smash them up and burn them out.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, June 2003; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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n.1972v.1993
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