Green’s Dictionary of Slang

Quotation search

Date

 to 

Country

Author

Source Title

Source from Bibliography

Band of Brothers choose

Quotation Text

[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 278: So drink, chug-alug-chug-alug / o drink, chug-alug-chug-alug.
at chug-a-lug, adv.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 3: I been watchin’ for half an hour and whisperin’ and makin’ like a mole.
at make like (a)..., v.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 72: The gen’rul told the padre that / he would – in a pig’s eye!
at in a pig’s arse! (excl.) under pig’s arse!, excl.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 47: If this keeps up, it’s gonna be your ass.
at be one’s arse under arse, n.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 30: The downfall of democracy – about which he doesn’t know his ass from a hole in the ground.
at not know one’s arse/ass from a hole in the ground (v.) under arse, n.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 266: We had us a real raggedy-ass cockfight till some thievin’ limey ate my best rooster.
at ragged-arsed, adj.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 233: He was as cold as a witch’s tit. Sawed on that thing [i.e. a leg] like it was a T-bone steak. Ain’t he got feelin’s?
at ...a witch’s tit under cold as..., adj.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 75: Cold as a gravedigger’s ass. Rations all froze stiff.
at ...a grave-digger’s arse under cold as..., adj.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 54: We’re not candy-ass gyrenes. We’re soldiers.
at candy-ass, adj.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 18: Knock off that grabass!
at grab-ass, n.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 62: ‘So knock it off!’ ‘Blow it out your butt!’.
at blow it out your ass!, excl.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 136: What did you want me to do? Sit here with my thumb up my ass, waiting for you?
at sit there with one’s finger up one’s ass under ass, n.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 4: That’s right. Play grabass! I told you to watch the village.
at play grab-ass (v.) under grab-ass, n.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 14: ‘Let’s haul ass,’ Sanchez whispered.
at haul ass, v.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 105: Now don’t go gettin’ the red ass.
at get the red ass (v.) under red ass, n.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 17: Got shook from creamin’ the gook, and dragged his butt at the rear.
at drag one’s ass, v.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 19: Tell him I’m gonna ream him from anus to appetite if he doesn’t remember damn’ quick.
at from asshole to appetite under asshole, n.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 319: While you’re out there, fighting for mom’s apple pie, your A-hole buddy [...] is raking in the old mazooma.
at asshole buddy (n.) under asshole, n.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 282: I am not tight or plastered, polluted, greased, blind, sozzled, ossified or atomized.
at atomized, adj.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 39: He felt in his pocket and brought out two pieces of hard candy. ‘Pogie bait?’.
at pogy bait, n.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 1: ‘Three months out of P.I. and you’re a real old salt!’ ‘Beat your gums!’.
at beat your gums! (excl.) under beat one’s gums, v.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 307: ‘I got ten bucks says Firesteen shot blanks,’ Goober said.
at shoot blanks (v.) under blank, n.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 20: Captain, I am. But a boot. Unaware. Inexperienced.
at boot, n.2
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 226: And them flyboys figure they do the fightin’.
at fly-boy, n.2
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 61: I was in Norfolk [...] doin’ duty at the brig in Portsmouth.
at brig, n.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 5: Goober’s so busy kissin’ Anderson’s tail he don’t see nothin’ but brown.
at brown, n.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 5: Buddy-roe, you talked me into it.
at buddy-o (n.) under buddy, n.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 3: When the brass starts actin’ buddy-buddy [...] stand by for a ram.
at buddy-buddy, adv.
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 170: ‘The bug-out route. Nobody told me where it is.’ [...] ‘What the hell’s that?’ ‘Where you . . . bug out, pull back. We always had a bug-out route in advance.’.
at bug out, v.1
[US] (con. 1950) E. Frankel Band of Brothers 101: Me and my bunkie got us a good place fer some sack drill.
at bunkie, n.
load more results