Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Flee the Angry Strangers choose

Quotation Text

[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 249: Go on, Dinch, cop a walk.
at cop a walk (v.) under cop a..., v.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 106: I don’t believe that applehead. [Ibid.] 371: You applehead freak.
at applehead (n.) under apple, n.1
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 154: She’s been kickin around the Village for years.
at kick around, v.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 50: ‘Carter, steal my wife, but don’t —’ ‘Don’t, your hairy ass. You don’t make a Wengel out of me, boy.’.
at your arse! (excl.) under arse, n.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 67: Well, kiss my royal ...
at kiss my arse!, excl.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 359: I fixed Wengel’s ass good.
at fix someone’s ass under ass, n.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 398: Blow it out your ass, Stoney!
at blow it out your ass!, excl.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 69: I shook loose with a few fine and ready guys [...] and, man, we were big-assed boys for the Promised Land.
at big-ass, adj.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 182: I got a paper asshole.
at have a paper asshole (v.) under asshole, n.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 398: ‘Diane, I’m going to have you committed.’ [...] ‘You have me put away,’ said Diane through her teeth, ‘and it won’t be you I’ll kill.’.
at put away, v.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 93: Red’s havin a goin-away party-like [...] He’s goin inside.
at go away (v.) under away, adj.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 244: He’s a junky from back.
at from back, phr.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 249: She smoked enough for ten way-back Vipers.
at way back, phr.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 62: Why, it’s cool at Paddy’s [...] Just the ball.
at ball, n.3
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 230: Along come three Vipers and some balling chick with them.
at balling, adj.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 257: I want four hundred beans. [Ibid.] 384: They wanna give away a billion and a half green beans.
at bean, n.1
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 26: Jesus, you beardless wonder! Jesus, you want to freeze right up on that Chev’alet?
at beardless wonder (n.) under beard, n.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 179: ‘How can she make such a buffoon of herself?’ ‘Beats me.’.
at beats me! (excl.) under beat, v.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 362: You scare the livin Jesus outta me.
at scare the bejazus out of (v.) under bejazus, n.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 309: It’s Yankee big hats and not Yankees he hates.
at big hat (n.) under big, adj.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 78: You know they carry on with their big talk and laughin.
at big talk, n.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 358: Harry Sticks, a lousy blackbelly.
at black belly (n.) under black, adj.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 31: Timmy, he likes people should blast ’im.
at blast, v.1
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 364: I want a blast, I want it quick [...] I want it main line for one blast.
at blast, n.1
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 384: They got seventeen cats indicted down there, dig me. They got the Brookside chief of police on the blotter, and a sheriff too.
at on the blotter under blotter, n.1
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 416: Blowtops like me are poison to their aims.
at blowtop (n.) under blow, v.2
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 78: You know they carry on with their big talk and laughin or they’ll blow their caps for lookin in mirrors.
at blow one’s cork (v.) under blow, v.2
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 243: She’s oney a bohawk anyway.
at bohunk, n.
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 336: Write out a check for five grand out of your petty cash before I boost it.
at boost, v.2
[US] (con. 1948) G. Mandel Flee the Angry Strangers 360: I’m going to school and learn unionism [...] I’ll learn how to put the boots to pigs.
at put the boots to (v.) under boot, the, n.
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