Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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M*A*S*H choose

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[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H (2004) 82: ‘You betcher ever-lovin’ A, buddy-boy,’ Hawkeye said.
at a, n.
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H (2004) 138: You all give me the red ass.
at give the red ass (v.) under red ass, n.
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H 108: We wouldn’t be going out of our way for a Christless Regular Army Colonel if we didn’t mean it!
at Christless (adj.) under Christ, n.
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H (2004) 96: If you give us any kind of a bad time, me and Trapper John are going to clean your clock.
at clean someone’s clock (v.) under clean, v.
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H 84: Send some cowboys to Seoul for all the goddam blood they can get.
at cowboy, n.
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H 164: I’ve got orders for you two eightballs to ship out of here.
at eightball, n.
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H (2004) 91: ‘I’m Colonel Cornwall...’ ‘Cornwallis? [...] I thought we fixed your wagon at Yorktown.’.
at fix someone’s wagon (v.) under fix, v.1
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H (2004) 197: Impaled on the horns of the kind of trouble only hardnoses can survive.
at hard-nose, n.
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H 105: Stop these beasts...from addressing me as Hot-Lips.
at hot-lips (n.) under hot, adj.
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H (2004) 125: I thought I lived with the two biggest rubes in Korea [...] until this jeeter came along.
at jeeter, n.
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H (2004) 204: I’m glad it happened, and I’m some jeezly glad it’s over.
at jeezly, adj.
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H (2004) 156: He went to some jerkwater colored college.
at jerkwater, adj.
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H (2004) 133: ‘The Duke’s trying to make a four.’ [...] ‘Little Joe,’ Duke begged the dice.
at little Joe (n.) under little, adj.
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H (2004) 36: Duke was a foot-washing baptist and Trapper John was a former mackerel-snapper.
at mackerel-snapper (n.) under mackerel, n.
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H (2004) 127: You talk to the broad [...] and you say, ‘Honey, let’s go somewhere and tear off a piece.’.
at tear off a piece (v.) under tear off, v.2
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H (2004) 217: Didn’t do nawthin’ but hoot, holler, drink rum and chase that native poon!
at poon, n.1
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H (2004) 133: We’re just a bunch of screwups from up the line.
at screw-up, n.
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H (2004) 155: We’re all starting to get stirry again. We need something to do.
at stirry (adj.) under stir, n.1
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H (2004) 127: Of course [...] this method doesn’t guarantee success. You may strike out.
at strike out (v.) under strike, v.
[US] ‘Richard Hooker’ M*A*S*H (2004) 158: ‘I told you Henry believes in free enterprise, too.’ ‘You’re damn tootin’.’.
at you’re darn tootin’ under tooting, adj.
[US] R. Lardner Jr M*A*S*H [TV script] hawkeye: This kid looks like a loser. Maybe we better get the bead-jiggler to put in a fix.
at bead-jiggler (n.) under bead, n.2
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