释义 |
meat rack noun- a restaurant, bar or other public place where people gather in search of sexual partners US, 1962
- — Donald Webster Cory and John P. LeRoy, The Homosexual and His Society, p. 265, 1963: “A lexicon of homosexual slang”
- Soon, we got up, walked around the west side–toward the “meat rack”–the gay part of the park. — John Rechy, City of Night, p. 53, 1963
- Laguna Beach, you might say, is the meat-rack of the faggot surfing set. — Roger Gordon, Hollywood’s Sexual Underground, p. 155, 1966
- The kid from nowhere who may be wanted everywhere, who leans against the railing in Los Angeles’ Pershing Square and displays his masculinity on the well-known “meat rack.” — Johnny Shearer, The Male Hustler, p. 9, 1966
- Our landlord had explained that the “meat rack” (an outdoor sex-supermarket) was only a block or so away. — Screw, p. 17, 31 July 1969
- Walk along that park wall at night. It’s a meat rack. — Edwin Torres, Q & A, p. 116, 1977
- “Your first years in The Pines you can’t get enough of the beach parade, tea, the meat racks.” — Ethan Morden, Buddies, p. 170, 1986
- “Every time I see her she’s staggering around in some meat rack on Division Street, wearing Kevin Butler’s jersey.” — Hunter S. Thompson, Generation of Swine, p. 73, 27 January 1986
- What if the tabloids–or, worse yet, some activist–had discovered the virile young star of said movie wagging wienie at the local meat rack. — Armistead Maupin, Maybe the Moon, p. 274, 1992
- Piccadilly in London’s West End, an area where homosexuals and homosexual prostitutes offer their services like so much meat displayed in a butchers UK, 1972
- “Did you know,” I say at last, “that this part of London is known as the Meat-Rack?” “Nah,” replies Jez. — Melanie McGrath, Hard, Soft & Wet, p. 54, 1998
- Piccadilly very quiet, the Meat Rack nearly empty. — Jake Arnott, He Kills Coppers, p. 53, 2001
- a gymnasium US
- — Elementary Electronics, Dictionary of CB Lingo, p. 86, 1976
- the female breasts US
- Check out that meat rack! — Mr. Skin, Mr. Skin’s Skincyclopedia, p. 52, 2005
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