词汇 | pit stop |
释义 | pit stop Theme: HYGIENE n. an underarm deodorant. (Because it stops armpit odor.)Man, do you need some pit stop!Can I borrow your pit stop? I need it bad. Theme: TOILET - USE n. a pause in a journey (usually by car) to urinate. (From the name of a service stop in automobile racing.)I think we'll pull in at the next rest area. I need a pit stop.Poor Max needs a pit stop every thirty miles. Idiom pit stop mainly American, informal a short stop that you make on a long car journey in order to rest, eat and go to the toilet.Clean toilets and a nice place to eat are what drivers are looking for when they make a pit stop. pit stop noun 1 while driving, a stop at a restaurant, petrol station or rest area to use the lavatory and/or buy food and drink; a visit to the toilet US, 1968. 2 a short stay in prison, especially one occasioned by a parole violation US, 1984. 3 an underarm deodorant US, 1969 pit stop1. A stop during an auto race to repair or refuel the racing vehicle. With only three laps left, he'll have to decide whether to make a pit stop or try to reach the finish without running out of gas. 2. A short stop taken during a car trip to eat, rest, and/or refuel. I knew it was going to be a long drive from New York to Florida, so I planned several pit stops along the way to give myself a break. pit stop1. n. a pause in a journey (usually by car) to urinate. (From the name of a service stop in automobile racing.) I think we’ll pull in at the next rest area. I need a pit stop. 2. n. an underarm deodorant. (Because it stops armpit odor.) Can I borrow your pit stop? I need it bad. pit stopA brief rest stop for refreshment or bathroom use. From the first half of the 1800s, “pit” meant, among other things, a place where engines were repaired or maintained. Later the term “pit stop” was adopted in automobile racing, where it denoted a trackside place for refueling or some other service. Still later, the term was extended to mean such a stop, especially during an automobile trip. It also began to be used figuratively. Thus Mike Lawson had it in House Secrets (2009), “Then off to the Senate he flew, and the Senate, all the commentators concurred, was but a pit stop on his race to the Oval Office.” |
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