释义 |
hole noun- the vagina; sex with a woman; a woman; women UK, 1592
- “Snatch,” “hole,” “kooze,” “slash,” “pussy” and “crack” were other terms referring variously to women’s genitals, to women as individuals, or to women as a species. — Screw, p. 5, 3 January 1972
- — Edith A. Folb, runnin’ down some lines, p. 242, 1980
- Goes back to when I had my first hole. First proper goose and all that. — Kevin Sampson, Clubland, p. 84, 2002
- the anus UK, 1607
- [S]tick this f’ing pitchfork up your hole[.] — Graham Linehan and Arthur Matthews, And God Created Women’ (Father Ted, Series 1, Episode 5), 1995
- the mouth US, 1865
- Shut your hole about my old man. — Irving Shulman, The Amboy Dukes, p. 26, 1947
- Aw, shut your big hole! — George Mandel, Flee the Angry Strangers, p. 247, 1952
- Shut your hole, Mae; youre swishing so much youre going to make a hurricane[.] — John Rechy, City of Night, p. 203, 1963
- [H]e’s a goddam nigger-lover ... now, jest shut your hole an’ git on over yonder an’ check them leg-irons. — Terry Southern, Texas Summer, p. 75, 1991
- a passive, promiscuous, unattached lesbian US
- — William K Bentley and James M. Corbett, Prison Slang, 1992
- in prison, a cell designed for solitary confinement UK, 1535
Always with “the”. - Filth is an important part of hole therapy. — Clarence Cooper Jr, The Farm, p. 79, 1967
- When I asked for books to read in this particular hole, a trustee brought me a list from which to make selections. — Eldridge Cleaver, Soul on Ice, p. 34, 1968
- So they throwed us in the hole. — Bruce Jackson, In the Life, p. 116, 1972
- Zuzu said we was only playing, but they gave me thirty days in the hole. — Edwin Torres, Carlito’s Way, p. 46, 1975
- “I want this punk in the hole,” the black guard breathed heavily, tired by his bloody workout. — Bobby Seale, A Lonely Rage, p. 258, 1978
- Next thing I know I’m in the hole. Solitary confinement. — Raging Bull, 1980
- an undesirable place; a place that is dirty or disordered UK, 1876
- I tell the Feds I am SO not sharing a cell with him, or with the guy from The Commitments, roysh [right], and they put me in one by myself and it’s a bit of a hole. — Paul Howard, The Teenage Dirtbag Years, p. 39, 2001
- any place where a supply of illegal drugs is hidden US
- “The homies talking about getting back the ‘hole,’ so if you see it on fire, don’t trip (panic).” A “hole” is street slang for a place where drugs are stashed. — Los Angeles Times, p. B3, 27 May 1993
- a monetary or social difficulty, a mess, a scrape UK, 1760
- [Y]ou don’t have to be too near the Welsh camp to know that Graham Henry is in a bit of a hole. — The Observer, 18 November 2001
- Organisers in a hole over state of Shinnecock[.] — The Guardian, 22 June 2004
- the subway (underground) US, 1933
- — New York Times Magazine, p. 88, 16 March 1958
- That’s why there was so much fury when they were taken out of “the hole” and replaced by Transit Authority cops. — Leonard Shecter and William Phillips, On the Pad, p. 159, 1973
- a mine US
- Had a big one back in ‘68, up to Farmington. One of Consolidation’s holes. — John Sayles, Union Dues, p. 158, 1977
- on the railways, a passing track US
- — Norman Carlisle, The Modern Wonder Book of Trains and Railroading, p. 264, 1946
- in trucking, a position in the gear box US
- — Montie Tak, Truck Talk, p. 84, 1971
- a tobacco cigarette US
- — Eugene Landy, The Underground Dictionary, p. 67, 1971
- in drag racing, the starting line US
- In a race, the first driver off the starting line is first out of the hole. — Ed Radlauer, Drag Racing Pix Dix, p. 28, 1970
- in carnival and circus usage, a job US
- Tony had started the season with a hole (that is, a job) in one of the big money games. — Peter Fenton, Eyeing the Flash, p. 124, 2005
- a pretty homosexual man US
- Brown was the punk man: he had about six homos working for him selling pills, and he had three top-notch holes, homos who looked like beautiful women, whom he was pimping. — James Carr, Bad, p. 73, 1975
▶ after his hole; after his end of a man, seeking sex with a woman UK, 1961 From HOLEENDget your hole to have sexual intercourse IRELAND- Actually getting his hole wasn’t what he was after at all–he just wanted to know if he could get his hole. — Roddy Doyle, The Van, p. 256, 1991
▶ go in the hole to fall from a pole, tower, rig or building under construction US- If you had to fall, he told her, try to do it inside the structure, because they decked in every other floor as they bolted up. But either way, falling inside or out, it was called “going in the hole.” — Elmore Leonard, Killshot, p. 35, 1989
▶ in the hole in police usage, hiding and avoiding work US- He was telling me things he probably told his young partners during lonely hours after two a.m. when you’re fighting to keep awake or when you’re ‘in the hole’ trying to hide your radio car, in some alley where you can doze uncomfortably for an hour, but you never really rest. — Joseph Wambaugh, The Blue Knight, p. 92, 1973
|