释义 |
dreck
dreck D0386300 (drĕk)n. Slang 1. Worthless, distasteful, or nonsensical material: "the dreck that generally passes for the modern sitcom" (David Carr).2. Rubbish; trash. [German, dirt, trash, and Yiddish drek, excrement, both from Middle High German drec, dung, filth, from Old High German; see sker- in Indo-European roots.] dreck′y adj.dreck (drɛk) nslang chiefly US rubbish; trash[from Yiddish drek filth, dregs] ˈdrecky adjdreck or drek (drɛk) n. Slang. 1. dung. 2. junk. [1920–25; < Yiddish drek; c. German Dreck filth; compare, Old Norse threkkr excrement] ThesaurusNoun | 1. | dreck - merchandise that is shoddy or inferiorschlock, shlockmerchandise, product, ware - commodities offered for sale; "good business depends on having good merchandise"; "that store offers a variety of products"jargon, lingo, patois, argot, vernacular, slang, cant - a characteristic language of a particular group (as among thieves); "they don't speak our lingo" |
dreck
dreck1. slang Trash or junk. We need to get this dreck out of here before Grandma comes to visit.2. slang By extension, something that is worthless, stupid, or of poor quality. You got an F on that paper because it was complete dreck.dreck (drɛk) n. dirt; garbage; feces. (From German via Yiddish.) I’ve had enough of this dreck around here. Clean it up, or I’m leaving. dreck Related to dreck: divisiveness, dropped, revised, smote, tiered, vindicationSynonyms for drecknoun merchandise that is shoddy or inferiorSynonymsRelated Words- merchandise
- product
- ware
- jargon
- lingo
- patois
- argot
- vernacular
- slang
- cant
|