释义 |
auntie noun- an older, effeminate male homosexual US, 1930
A tad cruel, if not derogatory. - Later, when I went to the director’s house with the auntie – several weeks later – the director would be redecorating his house. — John Rechy, City of Night, 1963
- — Paul Baker, Polari, 2002
- They also think he has an in with the law because an old auntie fuzz man gets his boys through Tony. — William Burroughs, Letters to Allen Ginsberg 1953–1957, p. 82, 28 December 1954
- — Donald Webster Cory and John P. LeRoy, The Homosexual and His Society, p. 261, 1963: A Lexicon of Homosexual Slang
- I had an address book a mile long, packed with tricks from “drag queens” to rough trade, old aunties, little nellie queens, queens that stayed home with mother. — Antony James, America’s Homosexual Underground, p. 78, 1965
- The folklore of the hustler’s world has legendary stories of hustlers who supposedly made the scene with a big-time producer, satisfied the old auntie and ended up as a big star. — Johnny Shearer, The Male Hustler, p. 141, 1966
- Is this the way to treat another gay person with whom they disagree – calling him “auntie”? — Screw, p. 8, 24 January 1969
- Now when they get older, they switch to what the homosexuals call “aunties.” Now these aunties are 35, 40 and older. [Quoting John B. Williams]. — The Advocate, p. 2, 7–20 July 1971
- To the younger homosexual, an auntie often translates as anything over thirty having lived too long with nothing to show for his age. Youth is the premium in the real world, but it is the criterion in the gay world. — Bruce Rodgers, The Queens’ Vernacular, p. 25, 1972
- a disoriented unlambed ewe that thinks she has lambed and steals the lamb of another NEW ZEALAND
- — Eugene Nelson, Glossary, p. 1, 1999
- the bleed period of the menstrual cycle NORFOLK ISLAND
Also variant “aunty”. - — Beryl Nobbs Palmer, A Dictionary of Norfolk Words and Usages, p. 1, 1992
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