释义 |
dingdong noun- the penis US, 1944
- He kept sitting around and trying to figure out what all this excitement was about over his erect ding-dong. — Johnny Shearer, The Male Hustler, p. 27, 1966
- [T]he man had used his handkerchief to wipe up the “funny white juice that came out of his dingdong”[.] — James Harper, Homo Laws in all 50 States, pp. 41–42, 1968
- I quoted in repetitious sing-song the overheard limerick “King Kong plays ping pong with his ding dong.” — Neal Cassady, The First Third, p. 67, 1971
- “Then she brought it out and began to nurse on it, mistakenly thinking it was a real ding-dong.” — Stanley Weber, A Study of Sex in Prison, p. 80, 1973
- Gino had a slight, twenty three year old paunch, nappy hair curling fiercely on his black ass and a small ding dong. — Odie Hawkins, Black Casanova, p. 42, 1984
- I notice the eyes of some cats here, openly and secretly spying, measuring the length and width of the next guy’s dingdong! — Clarence Major, All-Night Visitors, p. 31, 1998
- Truth is, I think naked men are kind of strange-looking, what with their doodles [testicles] and ding-dong hanging loose like they do. — Janet Evanovich, Seven Up, p. 134, 2001
- a sing-song UK, 1960
Rhyming slang for “a song”. - [H]aving a bit of a ding-dong round the old Joanna [piano]. — Ronnie Barker, Fletcher’s Book of Rhyming Slang, p. 39, 1979
- a gas-powered railway coach used on a branch line US, 1945
- — Norman Carlisle, The Modern Wonder Book of Trains and Railroading, p. 261, 1946
- a heated quarrel UK, 1922
- [W]e have ding-dongs and arguments about feminism. — Sally Cline, Couples, p. 143, 1998
- [I] had a massive bleedin’ ding-dong row anyway! — Wayne Anthony, Spanish Highs, p. 105, 1999
- a party UK, 1936
Extended from the sense as “a sing-song”. - We have quite a ding-dong going on here some weeks. The table wine flows like water. — Ray Galton and Alan Simpson, Hancock’s Half Hour, 22 April 1958
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