Green’s Dictionary of Slang

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Chili choose

Quotation Text

[US] O. Hawkins Chili 72: A bottom of the deck, private first class, jive ass soldier.
at jive-ass, adj.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 92: We’re headed toward the mountains above San Berdoo.
at Berdoo, n.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 81: One of the grooviest [...] of the bunch was a stone to the bone sister named Althea.
at to the bone (adv.) under bone, n.1
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 23: She [...] has a nice home and a nice husband with a nice job. I’d make book on it.
at make book (on) (v.) under book, n.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 84: Dearest Katherine, an exquisite woman, built like a brick shithouse.
at built like a brick shithouse (adj.) under built, adj.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 25: A number of people already buzzed out from sips of whatever.
at buzzed out, adj.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 36: It was kinda phoney from the git, me gettin’ down on her case so bad.
at get on someone’s case (v.) under case, n.1
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 65: This chuckle headed cracker-honky-idiot.
at chuckleheaded, adj.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 56: I saw her [...] as a kind of sexual oreo, female outside and inside and male on the inner side.
at Oreo (cookie), n.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 70: I took a deep breath [...] to cool myself out.
at cool out, v.2
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 79: She wasn’t a nymph [...] I think her thing was cum freakism. She just liked to have it spill into her.
at cum freak (n.) under cum, n.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 40: Bobbie, deep sister from Naw’Leans . . . ummm huh.
at deep, adj.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 42: Gino had [...] a small ding dong.
at ding-dong, n.3
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 37: It was smaller than we thought it was. I had terrible thoughts of being caught, doggie-fashion.
at doggy fashion, adv.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 36: It was kinda phoney from the git, me gettin’ down on her case so bad.
at get down on, v.1
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 22: I do believe she wanted to get down with Marshall, George or me.
at get down, v.2
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 52: She ran it all down to me.
at run it down (v.) under run down, v.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 52: A narcotic fog [...] catalyzed by yet another druggy substance.
at druggy, adj.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 15: We have just smoked three joints [...] eaten a five pound pot of chili con carne, two pork chops each and a couple other things [...] Easily a case of the superduper munchies.
at super-duper, adj.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 18: I finagled my way into her telephone number.
at finagle, v.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 58: Her role was sufficiently sophisticated enough to allow to have a boyfriend [...] without any flack from the immediate community.
at flak, n.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 41: It was scheduled to be a freak out. We were all going to get buck naked and fuck ourselves into bad health.
at freak-out, n.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 13: Big Time Seducer [...] full of oddball ethics. ‘Plug the Gap!’, ‘Go to daylight!’, ‘Pop through the note!’.
at gap, n.1
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 13: Dearest Alice [...] kissing with eyes clinched, giving it all up.
at give it up, v.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 21: [...] excited by our ease with each other, the grooviness we felt.
at groove, v.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 69: Stylish high yaller woman, so they used to call ’em.
at high-yellow, adj.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 43: A perverse streak of ’hoe that I had sensed in her.
at ho, n.1
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 44: This one gorgeous-juicy hole down between these fantastic columns.
at hole, n.1
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 23: We hooked up. I offered the orchid.
at hook up (with), v.
[US] O. Hawkins Chili 95: Somebody’s havin’ a terrific hurt put on ’em.
at put the hurt on (v.) under hurt, n.
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