Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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The Choirboys choose

Quotation Text

[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 31: I think he’s got a leaky seabag. Dingaling. Psycho. You can’t even talk to him.
at ding-a-ling, adj.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 139: Once in a while I do somethin that might look to you like I give a fuck about some a these scumbags.
at give a fuck, v.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 42: She’s a dingaling, and there’s ways to handle them.
at ding-a-ling, n.1
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 42: It’s your life. If it ain’t worth a shit to you, it ain’t worth a shit to us.
at not worth a shit, phr.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 193: Harold [...] shrieked as the spray hit him in the acorns.
at acorns, n.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 226: She’s gonna say French or half and half.
at half-and-half, n.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 95: Okay, Omar, get in the black and white.
at black and white, n.1
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 238: ‘A helmet or an anteater’ [...] ‘Circumcised or uncircumcised’.
at anteater, n.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 170: Only fooled around with him a little.
at fool around, v.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 87: She think she be gittin the house and the car because this old man wif a brain like pigfeet made some kinds raggedy ass agreement she think is a legal will.
at ragged-arsed, adj.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 199: He had recently recovered from hepatitis gotten from a piece of community artillery passed from junkie to junkie.
at artillery, n.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 142: All the pussy around just teasin a guy with this no bra stuff and tight pants. Shit, they ask for it.
at ask for it (v.) under ask, v.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (2007) 216: He likes to run because he’s a celebrity on the avenue.
at on the avenue under Avenue, the, n.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 263: You get a broad in the car [...] badge her and bring her back here quick.
at badge, v.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 64: You think the sergeants care we bust our balls?
at break one’s balls (v.) under balls, n.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 139: She had the most balls. Took every dime I had.
at balls, n.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 109: ‘We ever get a limp dick bandit around here he’ll be a prime suspect.’ ‘Very funny, Potts.’.
at -bandit, sfx
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 342: She banged him in his office one afternoon.
at bang, v.1
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 110: They said it was a ‘dead bang’ case. A cinch.
at dead-bang, adj.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 255: He was very close to bringing in a two-banger.
at bang, n.1
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 139: The way you’re going to bat to get the old man back in the laughing academy.
at go to bat (v.) under bat, v.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 299: This gorgeous blonde girl with bazooms like volleyballs.
at bazoom, n.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 14: He gobbles one beaver and gets promoted. I’ve ate close to three hundred bearded clams in my time and never even got a commendation!
at bearded clam, n.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 291: You can beat off in a nickel toilet, ya cheap little fuck, ya.
at beat off, v.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 90: I can take those bigmouth kikes better than niggers.
at big-mouthed, adj.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 200: Pretty makeshift bindle, man.
at bindle, n.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 56: Someone shoulda plugged my old lady’s birdbath and I wouldn’t be in this fix.
at birdbath (n.) under bird, n.3
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 290: I kneel there and look right at her bird.
at bird, n.3
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys 243: [T]hough Sam Niles had never been a hotdog or black glove cop, he admired the [...] simplistic approach to life found in a John Wayne film.
at black-glove (adj.) under black, adj.
[US] J. Wambaugh Choirboys (1976) 44: You’d like to blow em down, wouldn’t you?
at blow down, v.
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