meat

meat

1. vulgar slang Male genitals, especially the penis.
2. slang A person regarded primarily or solely as an object of sexual attraction or gratification. Usually used in phrases, such as "piece of meat." As an exotic dancer, I'm little more than a piece of meat to the men who watch me. She had her eye on a hot hunk of meat sipping whiskey at the bar.
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

meat

1. n. the penis. He held his hands over his meat and ran for the bedroom.
2. n. the genitals of either sex; the sexual parts of either sex. I don’t want to see your meat! What kind of creep do you think I am?
3. n. a person of either sex considered sexually. If she doesn’t manage to wrap her legs around that big hunk of meat within the next twenty minutes, I’d lose my bet.
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See:
  • a cattle market
  • a piece of meat
  • after meat, mustard
  • all (that) meat and no potatoes
  • all meat and no potatoes
  • all that meat and no potatoes
  • be dead meat
  • be easy meat
  • be meat and drink
  • be meat and drink to
  • be meat and drink to (someone)
  • beat (one's) meat
  • beat one’s meat
  • beat the dummy
  • beat the meat
  • beat your meat
  • buzzard meat
  • dead meat
  • dog meat
  • easy meat
  • fresh meat
  • God sends meat and the devil sends cooks
  • it's not the meat, it's the motion
  • like a blind dog in a meat market
  • like a bolt out of the blue
  • meat
  • meat and drink to (one)
  • meat and drink to me, it is
  • meat and drink to one
  • meat and drink to someone
  • meat and potatoes
  • meat and two veg
  • meat market
  • meat on (one's) bones
  • meat puppet
  • meat rack
  • meat sweats
  • meat wagon
  • meat whistle
  • meat-and-potatoes
  • meathead
  • meatheaded
  • meathooks
  • mystery meat
  • no accounting for tastes, there is no
  • one man's meat is another man's poison
  • plates of meat
  • pound (one's) meat
  • pound one’s meat
  • put (some) meat on (one's) bones
  • red meat
  • red meat rhetoric
  • roast-meat clothes
  • so cold (that) you could hang meat (in it/there)
  • so cold you could hang meat
  • strong meat
  • the meat and potatoes
  • the meat in the sandwich
  • the meat of the matter
  • the nearer the bone, the sweeter the meat
  • What's that got to do with the price of meat?
References in classic literature
He sold more meat for one penny than we could sell for three; and he gave extra weight to whatsoever lass would buss him." And others said, "He is some prodigal who knows not the value of goods, and may be plucked by a shrewd man right closely."
After grace was said, and while the servants clattered in with the meat platters, Robin stood up and said:
Says he, 'I'll give ye the meat, fair dame, And ye will give me the bread."
Then they began to talk among themselves, and some said, "This must be some thief who has stolen cart, horse, and meat"; but others said, "Nay, when did ye ever see a thief who parted with his goods so freely and merrily?
And, moreover, I will go dine with you all, my sweet lads, and that as fast as I can hie." Whereupon, having sold all his meat, he closed his stall and went with them to the great Guild Hall.
When Robin and those that were with him came in, all laughing at some merry jest he had been telling them, those that were near the Sheriff whispered to him, "Yon is a right mad blade, for he hath sold more meat for one penny this day than we could sell for three, and to whatsoever merry lass gave him a kiss he gave meat for nought." And others said, "He is some prodigal that hath sold his land for silver and gold, and meaneth to spend all right merrily."
At last the dinner was ready to be served and the Sheriff bade Robin say grace, so Robin stood up and said, "Now Heaven bless us all and eke good meat and good sack within this house, and may all butchers be and remain as honest men as I am."
"Now busk ye, my merry men all," quoth he, "and bring forth the best we have, both of meat and wine, for his worship the Sheriff hath feasted me in Nottingham Guild Hall today, and I would not have him go back empty."
"Know, O White Man, that it is because of thy kind, because of all white men, that my man and I have no meat in our old age and sit without tobacco in the cold."
The meat, and the tea, and the tobacco seemed to have brought him back to life, and he gripped tighter hold of the idea behind his age-bleared eyes.
And why is it that you and your old woman are without meat at the end of your years?"
"When the dog takes your meat you beat the dog with a club.
And so I come back from Cambell Fort, and no payment has been made, and Moklan is dead, and in my old age I am without fish and meat."
"And no longer did he eat the meat placed before him," Zilla broke in.
"Wherefore," old Ebbits said with grave dignity, "there be no one to hunt meat for me in my old age, and I sit hungry by my fire and tell my story to the White Man who has given me grub, and strong tea, and tobacco for my pipe."