释义 |
caboose noun- the buttocks US, 1919
- “As a matter of fact, you got what railroading folk call a mighty trim caboose.” — Nelson Algren, A Walk on the Wild Side, p. 87, 1956
- He cussed her as he drove his needle-toed shoe into her wide caboose several times. — Icerberg Slim (Robert Beck), Pimp, p. 168, 1969
- Kitty bemoaned, “She’s got a sexy caboose.” — Seth Morgan, Homeboy, p. 135, 1990
- Nice knockers, plus some dark crotch and caboose. — Mr. Skin, Mr. Skin’s Skincyclopedia, p. 13, 2005
- the final participant in serial sex US
From the phrase PULL A TRAIN - — Current Slang, p. 14, Spring 1970
- More common was the spontaneous act of gang sex: “pulling a train” on a drunken girl at the party – the boy’s rank in the gang determined if he was the engine, the caboose, or somewhere in between[.] — Gini Sikes, 8 Ball Chicks, p. 103, 1997
- the youngest child in a family US, 1969
- — Frederic G. Cassidy, Dictionary of American Regional English, Volume 1, p. 502, 1985
- a jail US, 1865
- — J.E. Lighter, Historical Dictionary of American Slang, Volume 1, p. 344, 1994
- a small house or shack TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO, 1956
- — Lise Winer, Dictionary of the English/Creole of Trinidad & Tobago, 2003
- a cooking shed CAYMAN ISLANDS
- — Aarona Booker Kohlman, Wotcha Say, p. 25, 1985
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