Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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One to Count Cadence choose

Quotation Text

[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 43: Airman tried to give him a higher asshole with a rum bottle.
at tear someone a new asshole, v.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 236: You are a straight arrow square, aren’t you?
at straight-arrow, adj.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 42: They were, to a man, crazy. They called it ‘going Asiatic’. [Ibid.] 154: Maybe I’m going Asiatic like the rest of you bastards.
at asiatic, adj.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence 231: He expected push-ups and an ass-chewing.
at ass-chewing (n.) under ass, n.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 335: Teaching at some fat-ass girl’s college in the North.
at fat-ass, adj.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 88: Sir, I know I’m off base, but the events of this morning seem to call for unusual actions.
at off base (adj.) under base, n.2
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 35: What you need is a seventy-five cent love affair [...] Six bits. No nookie.
at six bits (n.) under bit, n.1
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 188: I dropped the queen of spades on David’s trick. ‘Har har har there Davey-boy. Guess ya caught the old bitch again.’.
at bitch, n.1
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 170: There are no bad guys, no black or white hats, just misguided gray ones.
at black hat (n.) under black, adj.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 190: He grinned widely and said, his bop-talk gone, his accent heavy [etc.].
at bop, n.3
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 154: You got a bug up your ass tonight?
at have a bug up one’s ass (v.) under bug, n.4
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 125: I couldn’t understand [...] and that almost drove me bugs, man.
at drive (someone) bugs (v.) under bugs, adj.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 187: Morning and David [...] chatted about burning some grass if David could score.
at burn, v.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 129: Service policy had changed from the days when a dose was an automatic bust.
at bust, n.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 19: Butt out, Larkin.
at butt out, v.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 31: Couples, triples and daisy-chains in various stages, states, and forms of – intercourse is not strong enough.
at daisy chain, n.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 65: I had to lose my cherry sometime.
at lose one’s cherry (v.) under cherry, n.1
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 142: Two big cherry farm boys [...] both blew their rocks before they even got in, and remained cherries.
at cherry, n.1
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 142: Two big cherry farm boys [...] both blew their rocks before they even got in, and remained cherries.
at cherry, adj.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 159: Here we go again, around the chickenshitberry bush.
at chickenshit, adj.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 262: You think I been on your back, son, well this child is gonna show you what that means.
at child, n.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 141: A real cockhound lover-boy.
at cock hound (n.) under cock, n.4
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence 147: The term ‘cocksucker’ [...] in the South refers not to fellatio but cunnlingus.
at cocksucker, n.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 187: Hey, man, you cats cooling my chick for me?
at cool, v.2
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 171: A gangster was better than a snappy, wheeler-dealer preacher because the gangster was more honest.
at wheeler-dealer, n.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 220: You know what that mother said [...] That crooked fucker [...] that head Dick Tracy.
at Dick Tracy, n.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 194: That’s okay, Morning. You only fucked up a wet dream.
at could fuck up a wet dream under wet dream, n.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 208: I was waiting for him to go make the drop, deliver the two large suitcases sitting between the beds.
at drop, n.1
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 321: ‘Pour me a drink [...] eyewash, if you got it.’ ‘Just gin.’.
at eyewash (n.) under eye, n.
[US] J. Crumley One to Count Cadence (1987) 28: The houseboys were all hard-core finger-popping black-marketeers.
at finger-popping, adj.
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