释义 |
drag queen noun a man, usually but not always homosexual, who frequently or invariably wears women’s clothing US, 1941 From DRAGQUEENBut that is no reason for even our social scientists to remain merely tourists and write, for example, as if beats typically were devoted to “conspicuous consumption of the self”–an absurdity comparable to suggesting that most homosexuals are drag queens. — Dissent, p. 341, Summer 1961 Who is to say which is more pathetic–the outlandish “drag queen” who affects thick make-up, women’s skirts and high heels, or the “closet queen” who, in a much more shocking fashion, flaunts his perversion. — Antony James, America’s Homosexual Underground, p. 67, 1965 “That’s a drag queen, man. A male impersonating a female.” — Joe Houston, The Gay Flesh, p. 22, 1965 It was not that we were uptight about drag queens, but just that we saw no reason to associate ourselves with that tiny fringe of the gay world who dig powder puffs. — Screw, 21 March 1969 At Highland and Hollywood, the queens, awesome defiant Amazons, are assuming their stations. — John Rechy, The Sexual Outlaw, p. 39, 1977 Her lips are some unlikely shade of copper or violet, courtesy of her local MAC drag queen makeup consultant. — Francesca Lia Block, I Was a Teenage Fairy, p. 121, 1998 Drag queens coming out of the ladies’ bogs[.] — Dave Courtney, Raving Lunacy, p. 99, 2000 |