mug shot, to mug (1948)
Don't do drugs
Thee police mug shots serve as the perfect anti-drugs campaignINDEPENDENT.CO.UK
mug2 (
mŭg)
n.
- Informal.
- The human face.
- The area of the human mouth, chin, and jaw.
- A grimace.
- A mug shot.
- A thug; a hoodlum.
- Chiefly British Slang. A victim or dupe.
mugshot
noun
informal
a photograph of a person’s face made for an official purpose, especially police records: when shown mugshots, the victim was unable to recognize anyone
humorous any photograph of a person’s face: a mugshot on the book’s cover shows the author
Etymology[edit]
Compound of
mug (
“face”) +
shot (
“snapshot”), US. Compare
mug (
“portrait”).
- A photograph taken of the head and shoulders, often from the front and in profile, usually taken in conjunction with somebody'sarrest.
- (Britain, slang) An unflattering photograph of a person's face.
Derived terms[edit]
mug
VERB (mugs, mugging, mugged)
1[WITH OBJECT] Attack and rob (someone) in a public place: 1948 拳擊:打臉he was mugged by three men who stole his bike
2[NO OBJECT] informal Make faces, especially silly or exaggerated ones, before an audienceor a camera:he mugged for the camera
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