1992 in J. Green It 96: They all spunked off, though – I would have been really angry if they hadn’t. One man actually spunked off five times.at spunk, v.
1993 J. Green It 193: [W]hat I was trying to do was show him that I was a cool ballsy woman who could not be intimidated.at ballsy (adj.) under balls, n.
1993 J. Green It 200: He did this show with another bloke and his slave, the three of them. [...] I'd contributed something to it, a bit of English culture, some Latin.at English culture (n.) under English, adj.
1993 J. Green It 188: [S]he worked in one of these sex clubs – the rip off clubs, ‘Give me fifty quid and I’ll meet you round the corner and give you a hand-job’, and then you run off with the money.at rip off, v.
1993 J. Green It 169: You can get into this sort of thing with pickups, if you go to the right kind of bar [...] Of course you don't know whether you can trust the guy [...] but that in itself has its own frisson.at pick-up, n.
1993 J. Green It [ebook] One Arab sheikh would have guards with guns in the dining room, and there'd be a couple of male clients, and he'd fill the rest of the table with high class pulls, men and women, two or three of each - stunning, gorgeous women, beautifully dressed, real diamonds, etc. at pull, n.
1993 J. Green It 189: I can't remember the ones I fucked, the ones I only sucked off and the ones I just slept with. Just a lot of Ruperty boys.at ruperty (adj.) under rupert, n.
1993 J. Green It 194: I'm not into scat. Shit. Some people are, but I’ve always termed scat ‘the final frontier’, the last taboo of one's sexuality.at scat, n.5
1993 J. Green It 199: Not that I saw myself as a stud in this situation, hardly a swordsman. My self-image is much more the little boy getting lucky.at swordsman (n.) under sword, n.