Dosh
Slang Term
British
★★★★☆ Common
Casual
含义: Money, cash
钱、现金
Dinero, efectivo
お金、現金
돈, 현금
British slang for money in general. Informal and friendly, often used when talking about having or needing money.
英式俚语,泛指钱。非正式且友好,常在谈论有钱或需要钱时使用。
Argot británico para dinero en general. Informal y amigable, a menudo usado cuando se habla de tener o necesitar dinero.
イギリスのスラングでお金全般を指す。カジュアルでフレンドリーで、お金があるとかないとか話す時によく使う。
돈을 뜻하는 영국 속어. 비격식적이고 친근한 느낌으로, 돈이 있거나 필요할 때 자주 사용됨.
例句
- Have you got any dosh on you? 你身上有钱吗?¿Tienes algo de dinero encima?お金持ってる?돈 좀 있어?
- We're a bit short of dosh this month. 我们这个月有点缺钱。Andamos un poco cortos de dinero este mes.今月ちょっと金欠なんだ。이번 달 좀 돈이 부족해.
- He made loads of dosh from that deal. 他从那笔交易中赚了很多钱。Ganó mucho dinero con ese negocio.彼あの取引で大金稼いだよ。걔 그 거래에서 돈 엄청 벌었어.
- No dosh, no fun.没钱就没乐子。Sin dinero, sin diversión.金がなきゃ楽しめない。돈 없으면 재미도 없지.
发音
/dɒʃ/
用法指南
语境: friends, informal money talk
语气: casual, friendly
✓ 正确说法
- Got any dosh?有钱吗?¿Tienes dinero?お金ある?돈 있어?
- Need some dosh.需要点钱Necesito algo de dineroお金いる돈 좀 필요해.
- Making dosh.赚钱Ganando dinero稼いでる돈 벌고 있어.
✗ 错误说法
- Very informal非常非正式Muy informalとてもカジュアル매우 비격식적
- Not for professional contexts不适合职业场合No para contextos profesionalesビジネスの場では使わない업무 상황에서는 부적절
常见错误
- British specific—not American
- Means money generally, not specific amount
起源与历史
Origin uncertain, possibly from 'dash' (tip or bribe) or African/Caribbean origins. Became popular British slang in the mid-20th century.
词源: Origin uncertain—possibly from 'dash' or African origins
最早记录: British slang from mid-20th century
文化背景
Era: Mid-20th century onwards
Generation: All ages
Social background: Universal
Pop culture: British TV and comedy; Casual British conversation
Regional notes: British slang. Not used in American English.
变体
DoshThe doshLoads of dosh
相关短语
更多同类表达
Quid
★★★★★
British pound sterling (informal)
Fiver
★★★★★
A five pound note
Tenner
★★★★★
A ten pound note
Loaded
★★★★★
Very wealthy, having lots of money
Blow
★★★★★
To spend money quickly or wastefully
Rip-off
★★★★★
A fraudulent overcharge or swindle
More from Money & Finance