Rock music with deliberately offensive lyrics expressing anger and social alienation; in part a reaction against progressive rock.
An aggressive and violent young criminal.
Sinônimos
Examples for "tough"
Examples for "tough"
1But tough conditions could continue for longer in some regions, he said.
2The Hungarian parliament last week passed tough new legislation on illegal immigrants.
3However, the rest of the national daily market suffered a tough October.
4Talk to the public information officer. Abrams' voice belied his tough talk.
5They have responded to the tough sugar market conditions in different ways.
1The changes do not represent the introduction of new under-the-hood search technology.
2And you have this long hood sort of connoting power and engine.
3He casually placed one hand on the hood and said, Nice car.
4A second later another went by, this time ending at the hood.
5The power control module is the only thing visible under the hood.
1The police and thug violence became a regular fixture of anti-government protests.
2This isn't one of the usual thug crime capers they're used to.
3Sherman was most concerned by the people who called him a thug.
4People often still see him as the thug he portrayed in Tsotsi.
5Don't tell me the Brotherhood can't deal with a single lowborn thug.
1So why on Earth would that corporate goon have said five years?
2We play with the cards and drink goon.Night-life is not so good.
3RELATED: Australia's chaotic border rules explained South Australians invented the goon bag.
4Next to me, Ralph got a similar treatment from Alex the goon.
5You underestimated me when you sent the goon squad out last night.
1Korshak had numerous associations that gave him purchase with Chicago's hoodlum crowd.
2He had been a hoodlum there, and had helped to hang Chinese.
3He's a young hoodlum who makes it big and then he's erased.
4Whereupon seven hoodlum students waited a decent moment, then shrieked with laughter.
5Billy was a mucker, a hoodlum, a gangster, a thug, a tough.
1She was a toughie, lived in our street, I used to write mash notes to.
2She's a toughie! This is her weekly workout routine, which includes one rest day on Sundays.
3It was a toughie, but you came through.
4She was the toughie in the family.
5Well, air resistance makes that a toughie.
Material for starting a fire.
A teenager or young adult who is a performer (or enthusiast) of punk rock and a member of the punk youth subculture.
1Of course, there are other American traditions, like being harassed or punked.
2But there was no doubt that Williams had punked them all.
3So the people in the audience for that screening of Woodpecker were punked.
4That he punked you on the whole birth certificate thing?
5The debut album from this energetic Brighton four-piece is a foot-stomping burst of punked country rock.
6Prowling the SFX stage like a punked-up-panther, Skin pounces on every line and claws it to shreds.
7My sitter just punked out on me.
8I'd been punked by a PC prankster?
9Far more interesting was Cockney Rejects' punked-up version of I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles: And one final effort here.
10Could be we're all getting punked.
11She still felt like a punked-out, faux-leather-wearing, free-thinking Bratz doll in a sea of Pretty Princess of Preppyland Barbies.
12And they punked 1D during the final concert in Melbourne, switching places with their band to play Teenage Dirtbag.
13Without so much as glancing at me, De Luca said: No, no, no, no... this guy punked me out, he's going back up to the unit.
14Carlos is the old boyfriend, slick and Latin and all Punked out.
15"They wanted to bully Barack but he wasn't going to be punked like that," Carol Anne Harwell said.
16"Bonnie punked out," Lula said.
Sobre este termo
punked
punk Verbo
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