hotshot
noun
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L312494 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈhɒtˌʃɒt/
adj
Etymology: Etymology tree English hot English shot English hotshot From hot + shot.
- Highly skilled.
“He was a hotshot lawyer, with an astounding win-loss record.”
- Displaying talent.
“Keep up those hotshot baskets, and the scouts are sure to take notice.”
noun
Etymology: Etymology tree English hot English shot English hotshot From hot + shot.
- Someone with exceptional skills in a certain field.
“She sure was a hotshot on the keyboard, 93 words per minute!”
“Heading into 2016 and 2020, if you told the hotshots from Obamaworld that you thought Biden would be a good candidate, they would uniformly offer a look of infinite patience, tolerance and condescension and say something like, “Well, I could understand how someone would think that.””
- A type of firefighter highly skilled in wildfire firefighting without external support, using basic tools that are backpacked in and manhandled about.
- A portable device that is used to jump-start an automobile battery, or the electrical output of such a device.
- A fast freight train.
“Indeed, development proceeded so rapidly thereafter that Mopac, for instance, was rebuilding a series of 10-year-old Woodard 2-8-4's into 4-8-4's by 1940 - not because they couldn't steam but because their 63-inch drivers couldn't roll the hotshots fast enough.”
- A dose of recreational drugs deliberately laced with poison.
“I sniffed glue, transmission fluid, gasoline, whatever drug anybody gave me, I took. […] [Y]ears ago, I was in a drug rehabilitation program and found out that my brother was killed after somebody gave him a hotshot, drugs laced with poison.”
- A lethal injection of heroin or another opiate.
““You guys are being babies.” “Babies.” “Oh, we're being babies, Mac? Why don't you go work for your dad all day?” “My dad's a meth dealer.” “[Mock Crying] Oh, oh, no! My daddy's in prison!” “My daddy used to give hot shots to prostitutes. Feel sorry for me!””
verb
Etymology: Etymology tree English hot English shot English hotshot From hot + shot.
- To give (somebody) a dose of recreational drugs deliberately laced with poison.