Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Stingray Shuffle choose

Quotation Text

[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 66: ‘You’re really into this history stuff, aren’t you?’ [...] ‘Fuckin’-A.’.
at fucking A!, excl.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 29: You wouldn’t know it to look at him, but Johnny had never gone all the way.
at go all the way (v.) under all the way, adv.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 48: ‘What’s an Anglo kid doing on vacation in Bogotá?’.
at anglo, adj.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 162: I know what you’re thinking [...] I’ll bet he doesn’t get any.
at any, n.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 255: Yes sir! Flying to the Big Apple! [...] New York, New York.
at Big Apple, n.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 149: I spent the money on a six-month kick-ass cocaine party.
at kick-ass, adj.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 311: These silver babies [i.e. model trains] are the train we’re walking towards.
at baby, n.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 44: Just give me a ballpark of how long the wait is!
at ball-park figure (n.) under ball-park, n.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 140: You ungrateful little prick! I fought in the Big One for you!...
at big one, n.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 293: Either of those two things, and it’s no Big O for Maria.
at big O, n.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 31: What do you say we blow this Popsicle stand?
at blow this popsicle stand (v.) under blow, v.1
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 104: There are main roles in a highschool: star quarterback, prom queen, class clown, brain, stoner.
at brain, n.1
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 303: Playboy Jack Murphy, portrayed by Robert Conrad in the delightfully campy Murph the Surf.
at campy, adj.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 1: Carjackings, exploitation of the elderly, cigarette boats running from the Coast Guard [etc.].
at car-jacking, n.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 198: Look’s like you’re up [i.e. on stage], Bob. Cherry-poppin’ time. Break a leg.
at cherry-pop (v.) under cherry, n.1
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 301: Serge pulled a pistol [...] and coldcocked one over the head.
at cold-cock, v.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 133: The legitimate customers began mixing with the coke fiends in the book line.
at coke fiend (n.) under coke, n.1
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 160: Damn straight we’re Bad Company!
at damn straight! (excl.) under damn, adv.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 30: He had landed a drop-dead attorney in a serious pantsuit and glasses.
at drop-dead, adj.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 47: ‘No, you dingleberry, unscrew the bottom.’ [...] ‘You know what a dingleberry actually is?’.
at dingleberry, n.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 47: Lenny passed a doobie back.
at doobie, n.1
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 118: ‘Where the hell’d you go?’ [...] ‘We thought you were taking a big dump or something.’.
at take a dump (v.) under dump, n.4
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 293: Okay, Rebecca’s an easy lay.
at easy lay (n.) under easy, adj.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 166: He ended up living in a Reno flophouse working [...] as a dishwasher.
at flophouse, n.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 17: Frat brothers in a Jeep that said No Fear!
at frat, n.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 314: There’s been a big fuck-up, and I’m going to get to the bottom of it.
at fuck-up, n.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 107: Rebecca [...] actually deserved to be pretty, because it wasn’t going to make her full of shit.
at full of shit, phr.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 67: You see the funky colors in the masonry?
at funky, adj.3
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 273: ‘I’ll tell you for a dollar,’ said the bum. Ivan handed him a folded George Washington.
at George Washington, n.
[US] T. Dorsey Stingray Shuffle 133: I’ve been waiting all day to get off.
at get off, v.3
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