释义 |
call girl noun a prostitute who makes bookings with customers by telephone US, 1922- James Hurley, 26, 340 Grove St., arrested yesterday on charges of soliciting a “call girl,” faces loss of his taxi driver’s permit and jail sentence if he is convicted. — San Francisco News, p. 1, 4 February 1948
- The girl actually was–a professional tart. A call girl. — Philip Wylie, Opus 21, p. 62, 1949
- The aristocrats among prostitutes are expensive call-girls who work for fancy fees and keep their pimps in luxury. — John M. Murtagh and Sara Harris, Cast the First Stone, p. 1, 1957
- Because a man told me that I would make very, very good money, that I was a lovely girl, and that I could start out as a $100 call girl any time I wanted. — James Mills, The Panic in Needle Park, p. 92, 1966
- I worked as an independent and could not imagine why a $100-a-night call girl like myself or Blossom would want or need a pimp. — Sara Harris, The Lords of Hell, p. 31, 1967
- One whole floor was a brothel of the most expensive call girls–beauties, all of them. — Herbert Huncke, Guilty of Everything, p. 29, 1990
- Coz says he’s been beefing up his East Coast staff, in part by hiring Richard Gooding, who broke the 1996 story about Dick Morris’s call girl for the rival Star. — Washington Post, p. C1, 26 February 2001
- High-priced call girls have come to town for the Super Bowl, but real economists understand that most of the money spent on them–like most of the money spent on inflated rates at top hotels–leaves town. — Houston Chronicle, p. A33, 1 February 2004
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