释义 |
B girl noun- a woman who works in a bar, encouraging customers through flirtation to buy drinks, both for themselves and for her US, 1936
- New York’s cafes and clubs are forbidden by law to employ hostesses or “B” girls. — Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, New York Confidential, p. 127, 1948
- — Jack Leit and Lee Mortimer, Chicago Confidential, 1950
- Sunday I dropped into the Little Harlem and when the B-Girl approached me I recognized her as the fat slob who insisted she was the wife of Freddy Strong and so to avoid having her ask for a drink I casually asked if she’d heard from Freddy lately. — Neal Cassady, Neal Cassady Collected Letters 1944–1967, pp. 301–302, 10 August 1951: Letter to Jack Kerouac
- The B-girls (B for bar) converge on Manhattan from all over the nation, but many are native New Yorkers. — Jess Stearn, Sisters of the Night, p. 17, 1956
- Told the management they’d have to stop those B-girls from tricking the tourists so badly if they wanted to retain an artist of my caliber. — Dick Gregory, Nigger, p. 130, 1964
- In the more posh cocktail lounges such as the Continental Hotel, undated B girls sit quietly nursing a Metaxa or Pernod[.] — Roger Gordon, Hollywood’s Sexual Underground, p. 115, 1966
- Despite her propriety and abject sanctity, Mama still spoke English like a bordertown B-girl. — Seth Morgan, Homeboy, p. 305, 1990
- Ginger was my mother’s nightclub name, to match here new career worked as a part-time stripteaser and “B-girl” in Tenderloin “B-joints.” — Kim Rich, Johnny’s Girl, p. 48, 1993
- You’ve got to pay $5 to the B-girl [who serves drinks to customers], $10 to the deejay. — James Ridgeway, Red Light: Inside the Sex Industry, p. 169, 1996
- A bunny sitting near me was more succinct. “They don’t want us to look like B girls hustling drinks.” — Kathryn Leigh Scott, The Bunny Years, p. 24, 1998
- a young woman involved in early hip-hop US
From “break girl”. - — James Haskins, The Story of Hip-Hop, p. 135, 2000
|