Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Anecdota Americana choose

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[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 136: When you get to bed tonight take his hand and put it on your affair.
at affair, n.1
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 108: He was about to inject the tip of his feebly erect ambassador.
at ambassador (of love), n.
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 45: A new word was coined for a certain actor whose inclinations were equally amorous for men as for women. One of his critics called him ‘ambisextrous.’.
at ambisextrous, adj.
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 108: The waitress in a one-armed beanery determined to have some fun with a patron.
at one-arm, adj.
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 188: All I sye is my bloody arse ’ole to you, you bloomin’ fuck.
at my arsehole! (excl.) under arsehole, n.
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 42: Three nude men were practising a sphinctrian posture, that is to say, in vulgar language, back-scuttling each other. [Ibid.] 156: There was nothing she hadn’t done for him [...] She had stopped at no licentiousness. He had screwed her and back-scuttled her.
at backscuttle, v.
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 100: ‘What’d he weigh?’ ‘Four pounds.’ ‘Hell, you hardly got your bait back!’.
at get one’s bait back (v.) under bait, n.1
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 60: The dame I had last night hollored to beat the band.
at to beat the band (adv.) under band, n.2
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 163: [...] a stranger, whom the benedict engaged in conversation while the bride was washing.
at benedict, n.
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 186: ‘What have you . . . a large Brownie or . . .’ ‘Ah didn’t come here to be insulted.’.
at brownie, n.1
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 183: It was said of a certain notorious ‘cunnilinge’, or ‘browning’, as the current tongue has it, that he was operated on for appendicitis and a hair mattress was taken out.
at browning, n.1
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 172: [of a Native American] Next night he was in a pool room, where a couple of young bucks were engaged in a tense cue duel.
at buck, n.1
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 171: One had shaved off the hair around her private parts, and the other commented on it. ‘How is it that I’ve got such a bush and you ain’t got any hair there?’.
at bush, n.1
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 145: Two friends, one of them the owner of a car, used to go ‘chippy-cruising’ every night.
at chippie-chasing (n.) under chippie, n.1
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 27: At a stag party on upper Broadway a negress was giving a ‘circus.’ She lay stripped on a matting and went through all the eye-rolling, bosom-heaving contortions of a woman with a lusty man screwing her.
at circus, n.
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 104: ‘Do you like cocktails?’ asked the college boy of the shy young lady, in a restaurant. ‘Oh, yes. Tell me some!’.
at cock, n.3
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 67: A notorious cock-sucker was once caught going down on one of the Singer midgets. His friends ridiculed him, [...] Whereupon, the fairy, smiling mysteriously, said, [...] ‘Doctor’s orders. I’m on a diet.’.
at cocksucker, n.
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 19: That dirty son-of-a-bitch, that lousy cock-sucking bastard, that whoremaster fairy.
at cocksucking, adj.
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 62: He discovered one day that his star had been selling her coynte (to use Burton’s elegantism), at a hundred dollars a screw.
at coynte, n.
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 103: An Irishman and an Italian were working on a sewer full of crap.
at crap, n.1
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 1: ‘Gentlemen,’ he said to the men that crowded the room, ‘is there any reason why we shouldn’t begin to talk cunt right away?’.
at talk cunt (v.) under cunt, n.
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 145: The youth was diddling away with the ardor of puberty.
at diddle, v.1
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 88: A TALL negro, of some heft, registered with a brown gal at a dingy hotel in the Bottoms of Kansas City.
at dingy, adj.1
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 6: The Dinktown band was doing its best when someone called the piccolo player a Cock-sucker.
at Dinktown, n.
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 133: He [...] began operations at once in his favorite position, the one variously known as dog-fashion, the cow-couple, all-fours, et cetera.
at doggy fashion, adv.
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 46: ‘Mamie,’ said the old man, ‘ef you hain’t done it, don’t do it, cause this ain’t fer it! This ain’t no doin’ license!’.
at doing, n.
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 47: He’s a business man and his rating is O. K. But he’s eppis a little meshuga.
at eppes, n.
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 120: A fellow invited a girl friend into one of those F.O.W.* cars [*For the benefit of those not au courant with the new additions to the vocabulary of the vernacular we may be pardoned for explaining that F. O. W. is an abbreviation for fuck or walk.].
at f.o.w.b., phr.
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 181: She never farted through silk all her life.
at fart through silk (v.) under fart, v.
[US] ‘J.M. Hall’ Anecdota Americana I 44: Tired of the various postures of love, [he] determined [...] to begin by teaching her how to play the flute.
at play the flute (v.) under flute, n.1
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