Green’s Dictionary of Slang

thrill n.

[ext. uses of SE]

1. a sensational story, a ‘thriller’.

[UK]Partridge DSUE (8th edn) 1225/1: ca. 1886–1905.

2. an orgasm.

implied in give someone a thrill
[US] in G. Legman Limerick (1953) 6: A young man by a girl was desired / To give her the thrills she required.

3. (Irish) a promiscuous woman.

V. Caprani Rowdy Rhymes (2011) [ebook] Now up round Summerhill there lived this grand ould ‘thrill’ / (What might be termed a gamey sort of soul) / She was fond of winin’, dinin’, and on her back reclinin’ .

In compounds

In phrases

give someone a thrill (v.)

to bring to orgasm.

[US]F.W. Pollock ‘Courtship Sl.’ in AS II:4 203: A man who ‘shows some mean stuff’ or who otherwise demonstrates unique ability in ‘necking’ gives the girl a ‘thrill.’.
[UK]Partridge DSUE (8th edn) 1225/1: since ca. 1910.
[US] in E. Cray Erotic Muse (1992) 364: She loves a gang-bang; she always will / Because a gang-bang gives her such a thrill. / When she was younger, and in her prime, / She used to gang-bang all the time.
Brian Limerick at whatfreaks.com 🌐 I once knew a girl named Jill / She used dynamite to give her a thrill / They found her vagina / In South Carolina / And parts of her tits in Brazil.
LouisHoney ‘Escape for Passion’ on White Shadow 🌐 Judy was feeling like an adored whore as Sid turned and twisted the cart down the cart path with one wheel in the graveled gutter giving her a thrill that she knew he wanted her to enjoy. It made her feel more secure to know that he had intended for her to get off on this device.