释义 |
dolly noun- the vagina UK
In the C19, a “dolly” was a “penis”, possibly from a “child’s dolly” (a toy a girl might play with); equally, it could derive from “washing dolly” (a device plunged in and out of wet laundry). The etymology here is likely to be the former: “Can I play with your dolly?”. - — Sky Magazine, July 2001
- an attractive young woman UK, 1906
Very much a word of its time. - — Newsweek, p. 28, 8 October 1951
- In what seems like not more than two minutes, four or five dollies are on the premises. — Robert Sylvester, No Cover Charge, p. 266, 1956
- [A] Britain where [...] women were pneumatic dollies or sex-starved harridans[.] — Stuart Jeffries, Mrs Slocombe’s Pussy, p. 101, 2000
- a homosexual who lives in the suburbs UK
- — Attitude, p. 60, July 2003: “New palare lexicon”
- a lesbian prisoner’s lover NEW ZEALAND
- — Harry Orsman, A Dictionary of Modern New Zealand Slang, p. 41, 1999
- a very feminine fashion style of the 1960s UK
- — Janey Ironside, A Fashion Alphabet, p. 14, 1968
- a capsule of Dolophine, known generically as methadone US
- Start dolly cure in a few days now. — William Burroughs, Letters to Allen Ginsberg 1953–1957, p. 25, 1 March 1954
- Maybe they’re putting some synthetic shit in it... Dollies or something. — William Burroughs, Naked Lunch, p. 214, 1957
- “Even without dollies,” Tom Tear said, “I could kick it in three days.” — Alexander Trocchi, Cain’s Book, p. 31, 1960
- “Some kid smashed into a drugstore, and he sold Kove a handful of dollies.” — Malcolm Braly, Shake Him Till He Rattles, p. 141, 1963
- I was clean for seven days, and after that I was on my own–without the dollies. — Jeremy Larner and Ralph Tefferteller, The Addict in the Street, p. 69, 1964
- I had a doctor–right up here on 14th Street–he was giving out dollies and goofballs to everyone; in fact, he got arrested. — Ralph Tefferteller, The Addict in the Street, p. 69, 1964
- — Sidney Cohen, The Drug Dilemma, p. 128, 1969
- I had one little bitty piece of dolly [Dolophine] in my aspirin box. — Bruce Jackson, In the Life, p. 84, 1972
- in cricket, a simple catch UK, 1904
Possibly of Anglo-Indian origin. Reduced from “dolly catch”. - Drop a dolly. — Steve James, captain of, Glamorgan County Cricket Club, 18 June 2003
|