skeet-shooting

skeet-shooting

vulgar slang The ejaculation of semen, especially onto a partner following sexual intercourse.
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

skeet-shooting

n. the act of blowing one’s nose by pinching one nostril and using no tissue or handkerchief. (see also skeet.) There is nothing more disgusting than a bunch of college boys belching and skeet-shooting.
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions
See also:
  • on one's
  • on someone's
  • pillow-biter
  • save someone's skin
  • out of one's
  • (Have you) been OK?
  • let something drop
  • (something) blows
  • (I've) got to go
  • run someone out of town
References in periodicals archive
2011 -- Kuwait's national shooting team wins the Arab skeet-shooting tournament in Morocco, snatching eight gold, four silver, and two bronze.
3 ( ANI ): The White House has released a picture of President Barack Obama skeet-shooting to settle a row over whether he had fired a gun before.
An old skeet-shooting friend of mine still owns a very nice Remington 3200 with four sets of barrels.
But soon enough the two gents meet proper and bond over a round of French countryside skeet-shooting, Daddy proving conspicuously adept with a rifle.
Greenberg says the districts zero-tolerance policy prohibits any mention or depiction of guns--even "good guns." Gun Owners of New Hampshire and the NRA have vowed to take the matter to court if Greenberg does not allow the skeet-shooting student the same opportunity others have to depict their legitimate interest in responsible activities.
Keefe's living room, according to Louwagie, "is adorned with skeet-shooting trophies." Regarding the burglary, Keefe says: "I hated like heck to shoot anybody, but what are you gonna do when you're an old man?...
When House Democrats retreat to the Greenbrier for three days, lobbyists tag along, paying $6,000 each for a weekend of jitterbugging, skeet-shooting, and "When we get back, there's a little something I'd like to talk to you about ....
Yeates, therefore, moved the view at a rate he calculated would keep the comets in focus for a sufficient period -- an action akin to skeet-shooting.