释义 |
matinee noun- a sexual encounter in the mid-afternoon US, 1944
- Some commuting businessmen, called matinees, reject the night hours altogether and come afternoons between two and four-thirty[.] — Judge John M. Murtagh and Sara Harris, Cast the First Stone, p. 2, 1957
- A matinee, and so early in the day. — Robert Leslie, Confessions of a Lesbian Prostitute, p. 67, 1965
- The second appointment was a “matinee” with a tried-and-true customer, a man I had known for three years[.] — Sara Harris, The Lords of Hell, p. 101, 1967
- Picture, if you will, two young men ... old friends, if an unsatisfactory love affair can make for friendship ... in a room, engaged in the preliminaries of a matinee. — Angelo d’Arcangelo, The Homosexual Handbook, p. 7, 1968
- [L]ately l’d just as soon have a cold beer and hot matinee with the old Florrie while the kids are at Sunday school — Frank Hardy, The Outcasts of Foolgarah, 1971
- From theatrical usage and a 1930s recipe for an ideal marriage: “Once a day, plus matinee.” — Robert A. Wilson, Playboy’s Book of Forbidden Words, p. 167, 1972
- a repeat robbery of a victim US
- — Hyman E. Goldin et al., Dictionary of American Underworld Lingo, p. 159, 1950
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