Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Southern Folklore Quarterly choose

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[US] in Southern Folklore Quarterly MU (1949) 201: A ... [sailor] may complain of having the Chinese rot (diarrhoea) [HDAS].
at Chinese rot (n.) under Chinese, adj.
[US] Southern Folklore Quarterly Vol. 31 29: Do you have a match? Your face and my ass. Your breath and my farts. My socks, your breath. Not since Superman died.
at your face and my ass! (excl.) under face, n.
[US] Southern Folklore Quarterly XXXIV 128: People are said to be ‘high,’ ‘stoned,’ or ‘spacy’ when feeling the effect of grass.
at spacey, adj.
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