释义 |
date verb- (used of a prostitute) to have sex with a customer for pay US
- A white prostitute tried to date us at the Mai Fong restaurant, in Chinatown[.] — Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, Washington Confidential, p. 26, 1951
- His name is Milt. I’ve dated him before, he only gets to the Apple once or twice a year. — Ross Russell, The Sound, p. 182, 1961
- “If a john walks up and offers seven dollars she tells him to shove it, she only dates for ten.” — Robert Deane Pharr, S.R.O., p. 372, 1971
- The polite form is to have a date, to turn a date, or dating. — Chrfistina and Richard Milner, Black Players, p. 38, 1972
- to be or become old-fashioned UK
From the conventional sense (to fix definitely in a period). - It is also feared that when the buildings become dated in a few years time the government will still be paying for them. — The Guardian, 1 October 2002
- to caress the buttocks AUSTRALIA, 1984
From DATE - to poke in the anus; to goose AUSTRALIA
- He went past them to get a can of beer and the Glass Canoe dated him savagely, making him jump. — David Ireland, The Unknown Industrial Prisoner, p. 163, 1972
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