释义 |
mickey noun- the vagina AUSTRALIA, 1969
Earlier also “michael” (1950) and “mick” (1930s). - ANNOUNCER: Here’s a human interest story for you. Her name is ... [He thrusts microphone into GIRL’s face] GIRL: [sobbing] Mickey Snatchit. ANNOUNCER: Well, Miss...er...Snatchit. [Eyebrows raised to the audience] — Dorothy Hewett, The Chapel Perilous, p. 51, 1972
- She’s got a mickey like a vacuum cleaner...drags the marrow clear out of your bones! — Stuart Mills, Wives and Lovers, p. 110, 1976
- — David McGill, David McGill’s Complete Kiwi Slang Dictionary, p. 84, 1998
- the penis IRELAND, 1909
- “He’s got a lump on his mickey,” his mother said, gazing down on her nearest and dearest. “His penis,” I said with great authority. — John Fleetwood, In Stitches, p. 62, 1994
- [D]o you agree that the average Irish man is an indolent shit-bag who never thinks about anything but his gut and his mickey[?] — Joseph O’Connor, The Irish Make at Home and Abroad, p. 128, 1996
- a young bull, especially if unbranded AUSTRALIA, 1876
- I remember getting horned by a mickey in the arse. — Herb Wharton, Cattle Camp, p. 185, 1994
- an ordinary fellow US, 1949
- You must be new mickies ‘cause you don’t call a ship a boat. — Piri Thomas, Down These Mean Streets, p. 181, 1967
- a potato US, 1936
- After that, the junkies burn it to get at the brass pipes, and the kids do it for whatever reason kids burn things. Roasting mickeys or something. — Vincent Patrick, The Pope of Greenwich Village, p. 108, 1979
- “Also in spring firemen get more calls for fires in empty lots. The kids like to roast mickeys-” “Potatoes,” Carlucci says. “Talk about dumb. You think an Irish kid like Jimmy here don’t know what’s a mickey?” — Robert Campbell, The Cat’s Meow, p. 48, 1988
- an alcoholic drink adulterated with knock-out drops US, 1936
A shortened form of MICKEY FINN- Theory was to feed them the sweet talk, and in between all the chit and chat slip them these mickeys[.] — Bernard Wolfe, The Late Risers, p. 174, 1954
- “A mickey won’t hurt him any.” — Gypsy Rose Lee, Gypsy, p. 197, 1957
- Thrills would do anything–his favorite gimmick was a peyote-methedrine mickey in the champagne[.] — Ed Sanders, Tales of Beatnik Glory, p. 108, 1975
- Somebody slipped the poor old cat an arsenic mickey. — Robert Campbell, The Cat’s Meow, p. 139, 1988
- a flat pint bottle of alcohol US
- “Danny,” he said, “you gotta get me a mickey. I need a mickey awful bad.” — Robert Byrne, McGoorty, p. 144, 1972
▶ throw a mickey to throw a tantrum AUSTRALIA, 1952 Perhaps related to MICKEY
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