释义 |
flute noun- the penis UK, 1671
Plays on the shape, informed by oral sex. Variations include “flesh flute”, “living flute”, ONE-HOLED FLUTE, SILENT FLUTE, SKIN FLUTEPINK OBOEhaboia (a hautboy, an early oboe). In the Dictionary of Shakespeare’s Sexual Puns and Their Significance, 1984, Frankie Rubinstein discovers examples in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, 1600 (or earlier) and Anthony and Cleopatra, 1606–7 of Shakespeare punning on “flute” as “penis”. In more general usage in the C18. - a soda bottle filled with alcoholic drink US, 1971
- Patrolman Phillips testified that it was not uncommon for policemen assigned to a radio car to pick up a “flute”–a Coke bottle filled with liquor–which they would deliver to the station house. — The Knapp Commission Report on Police Corruption, p. 172, 1972
- It was responsible for bringing sandwiches and beer to the station house’s administrative and clerical personnel, and “flutes”–Coca-Cola bottles filled with liquor supplied by bars in the precinct–to the lieutenants and sergeants. — Peter Maas, Serpico, p. 60, 1973
- Cop calls the station house and the sergeant says, pickup a flute for the lieutenant. — Leonard Shecter and William Phillips, On the Pad, p. 94, 1973
- Hanrahan would send a patrolman out to a nearby bar for what he called a “flute”–a Coke bottle filled with gin. — Vincent Patrick, The Pope of Greenwich Village, p. 114, 1979
- a car radio NEW ZEALAND
From the language of car sales. - — David McGill, David McGill’s Complete Kiwi Slang Dictionary, p. 49, 1998
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