释义 |
aris noun- the backside, the buttocks; the anus UK, 1979
Rhyming slang from ARISTOTLE – BOTTLE – BOTTLE AND GLASS – ARSE- “Have you got any snout on you?” Asked the screw with a smile. The Bastard, what did he think I had some stuffed [up] my harris. — Frank Norman, Bang To Rights, p. 11, 1958
- JULIAN: Ooh! Look, he’s got a baggy old aris! SANDY: I’ll say he has. — Barry Took and Marty Feldman, Round the Horne, 17 March 1968
- I walk into a well-known bird-bandit’s lair and find a comely Richard [woman] flaunting her Arris [buttocks] around the gaff[.] — Anthony Masters, Minder, p. 37, 1984
- Recently the author was conversing with one skilled “linguist” who used “aris” for “arse”. Asked to justify its usage, he replied: “Well, Aristotle is a bottle; bottle-and-glass is an arse, Aris is short for Aristotle, so therefore an Aris is an Arse!” — John Meredith, Learn to Talk Old Jack Lang, p. 11, 1984
- I heard a good one the other day – ‘arris for bum. Know it? — Peter Corris, Make Me Rich, p. 7, 1985
- Dougie keeps banging on about wanting to try it up the aris. — Garry Bushell, The Face, p. 140, 2001
- a bottle AUSTRALIA
Also variant form “aras”. - — Sidney J. Baker, The Australian Language, p. 360, 1966
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