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“The van's really booking”


What does “It dopes it really really well. Dope even” mean?What does “Sold On” mean?Can we use “Do your Button” for “Close your button”?It really should be ROY GBP?Does the word “dashily” exist in English?Does the phrase “Do you want a hand in this” make sense?Drama dialogue, I wanna know the precise meaningWhy we would be abandoned when not referring to the same name as he?Does “Quixotic” really have this meaning: capricious, unpredictable, impulsive?Adverb for “of this”






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








1















A: Trent turned north off of Honolulu onto Glenwood.

B: The van's really booking.



Is there another meaning for 'booking'?
In this dialogue, the van is really going fast.



Maybe it means 'the van's ticketed'?










share|improve this question
























  • Did you read this or hear it? Are you sure it wasn't "cooking"?

    – Hot Licks
    6 hours ago











  • Common sense says Hot Licks must be right!

    – Tuffy
    6 hours ago






  • 7





    @HotLicks No..it is 70's speak for leaving or moving fast ie "Let's book".

    – Cascabel
    6 hours ago







  • 1





    @cascabel That one passed me by (probably rapidly). Maybe it never made it to the eastern side of the Pond.

    – BoldBen
    6 hours ago






  • 1





    But "booking sounds wrong to me- it's an unnatural mixing of register. That car was bookin'

    – Jim
    2 hours ago

















1















A: Trent turned north off of Honolulu onto Glenwood.

B: The van's really booking.



Is there another meaning for 'booking'?
In this dialogue, the van is really going fast.



Maybe it means 'the van's ticketed'?










share|improve this question
























  • Did you read this or hear it? Are you sure it wasn't "cooking"?

    – Hot Licks
    6 hours ago











  • Common sense says Hot Licks must be right!

    – Tuffy
    6 hours ago






  • 7





    @HotLicks No..it is 70's speak for leaving or moving fast ie "Let's book".

    – Cascabel
    6 hours ago







  • 1





    @cascabel That one passed me by (probably rapidly). Maybe it never made it to the eastern side of the Pond.

    – BoldBen
    6 hours ago






  • 1





    But "booking sounds wrong to me- it's an unnatural mixing of register. That car was bookin'

    – Jim
    2 hours ago













1












1








1








A: Trent turned north off of Honolulu onto Glenwood.

B: The van's really booking.



Is there another meaning for 'booking'?
In this dialogue, the van is really going fast.



Maybe it means 'the van's ticketed'?










share|improve this question
















A: Trent turned north off of Honolulu onto Glenwood.

B: The van's really booking.



Is there another meaning for 'booking'?
In this dialogue, the van is really going fast.



Maybe it means 'the van's ticketed'?







meaning






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 54 mins ago









Cascabel

8,41162957




8,41162957










asked 6 hours ago









LilyLily

61




61












  • Did you read this or hear it? Are you sure it wasn't "cooking"?

    – Hot Licks
    6 hours ago











  • Common sense says Hot Licks must be right!

    – Tuffy
    6 hours ago






  • 7





    @HotLicks No..it is 70's speak for leaving or moving fast ie "Let's book".

    – Cascabel
    6 hours ago







  • 1





    @cascabel That one passed me by (probably rapidly). Maybe it never made it to the eastern side of the Pond.

    – BoldBen
    6 hours ago






  • 1





    But "booking sounds wrong to me- it's an unnatural mixing of register. That car was bookin'

    – Jim
    2 hours ago

















  • Did you read this or hear it? Are you sure it wasn't "cooking"?

    – Hot Licks
    6 hours ago











  • Common sense says Hot Licks must be right!

    – Tuffy
    6 hours ago






  • 7





    @HotLicks No..it is 70's speak for leaving or moving fast ie "Let's book".

    – Cascabel
    6 hours ago







  • 1





    @cascabel That one passed me by (probably rapidly). Maybe it never made it to the eastern side of the Pond.

    – BoldBen
    6 hours ago






  • 1





    But "booking sounds wrong to me- it's an unnatural mixing of register. That car was bookin'

    – Jim
    2 hours ago
















Did you read this or hear it? Are you sure it wasn't "cooking"?

– Hot Licks
6 hours ago





Did you read this or hear it? Are you sure it wasn't "cooking"?

– Hot Licks
6 hours ago













Common sense says Hot Licks must be right!

– Tuffy
6 hours ago





Common sense says Hot Licks must be right!

– Tuffy
6 hours ago




7




7





@HotLicks No..it is 70's speak for leaving or moving fast ie "Let's book".

– Cascabel
6 hours ago






@HotLicks No..it is 70's speak for leaving or moving fast ie "Let's book".

– Cascabel
6 hours ago





1




1





@cascabel That one passed me by (probably rapidly). Maybe it never made it to the eastern side of the Pond.

– BoldBen
6 hours ago





@cascabel That one passed me by (probably rapidly). Maybe it never made it to the eastern side of the Pond.

– BoldBen
6 hours ago




1




1





But "booking sounds wrong to me- it's an unnatural mixing of register. That car was bookin'

– Jim
2 hours ago





But "booking sounds wrong to me- it's an unnatural mixing of register. That car was bookin'

– Jim
2 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















7














book




Intransitive verb 3) slang : leave, go especially : to depart quickly,



"We booked out of there. "




-Merriam Webster



So the van was proceeding at high velocity down the street.



Although Etymonline has its origin as "unspecified" to 1977, I am sure I heard it going back to at least 2 years earlier in Philadelphia or Lakehurst.






share|improve this answer




















  • 4





    Right. This is recent (late 20th-century) American slang, popular especially with children.

    – John Lawler
    6 hours ago







  • 2





    "let's book it" is a 'common' expression (meaning to go, not reserve)

    – Carly
    5 hours ago












Your Answer








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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









7














book




Intransitive verb 3) slang : leave, go especially : to depart quickly,



"We booked out of there. "




-Merriam Webster



So the van was proceeding at high velocity down the street.



Although Etymonline has its origin as "unspecified" to 1977, I am sure I heard it going back to at least 2 years earlier in Philadelphia or Lakehurst.






share|improve this answer




















  • 4





    Right. This is recent (late 20th-century) American slang, popular especially with children.

    – John Lawler
    6 hours ago







  • 2





    "let's book it" is a 'common' expression (meaning to go, not reserve)

    – Carly
    5 hours ago
















7














book




Intransitive verb 3) slang : leave, go especially : to depart quickly,



"We booked out of there. "




-Merriam Webster



So the van was proceeding at high velocity down the street.



Although Etymonline has its origin as "unspecified" to 1977, I am sure I heard it going back to at least 2 years earlier in Philadelphia or Lakehurst.






share|improve this answer




















  • 4





    Right. This is recent (late 20th-century) American slang, popular especially with children.

    – John Lawler
    6 hours ago







  • 2





    "let's book it" is a 'common' expression (meaning to go, not reserve)

    – Carly
    5 hours ago














7












7








7







book




Intransitive verb 3) slang : leave, go especially : to depart quickly,



"We booked out of there. "




-Merriam Webster



So the van was proceeding at high velocity down the street.



Although Etymonline has its origin as "unspecified" to 1977, I am sure I heard it going back to at least 2 years earlier in Philadelphia or Lakehurst.






share|improve this answer















book




Intransitive verb 3) slang : leave, go especially : to depart quickly,



"We booked out of there. "




-Merriam Webster



So the van was proceeding at high velocity down the street.



Although Etymonline has its origin as "unspecified" to 1977, I am sure I heard it going back to at least 2 years earlier in Philadelphia or Lakehurst.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 57 mins ago

























answered 6 hours ago









CascabelCascabel

8,41162957




8,41162957







  • 4





    Right. This is recent (late 20th-century) American slang, popular especially with children.

    – John Lawler
    6 hours ago







  • 2





    "let's book it" is a 'common' expression (meaning to go, not reserve)

    – Carly
    5 hours ago













  • 4





    Right. This is recent (late 20th-century) American slang, popular especially with children.

    – John Lawler
    6 hours ago







  • 2





    "let's book it" is a 'common' expression (meaning to go, not reserve)

    – Carly
    5 hours ago








4




4





Right. This is recent (late 20th-century) American slang, popular especially with children.

– John Lawler
6 hours ago






Right. This is recent (late 20th-century) American slang, popular especially with children.

– John Lawler
6 hours ago





2




2





"let's book it" is a 'common' expression (meaning to go, not reserve)

– Carly
5 hours ago






"let's book it" is a 'common' expression (meaning to go, not reserve)

– Carly
5 hours ago


















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