释义 |
cathouse noun a brothel US, 1893- She looked as if she might have worked half those years in a cat house. — Chester Himes, If He Hollers Let Him Go, p. 19, 1945
- The Mann Act was invented by a Chicago blue-nosed representative named Mann, after a hophead parlor-whore in melodramatic mood threw a note out of the window of the late Harry Guzik’s cathouse on which she had written “I am a white slave.” — Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, Washington Confidential, p. 86, 1951
- Just a while ago you were as hard as a little boy’s peter in a fifty-cent cat house. — Clarence Cooper Jr, The Scene, p. 199, 1960
- [S]he changed back and bided her time between cat houses in Saratoga and in other towns where Eddie was riding. — Madam Sherry, Pleasure Was My Business, p. 118, 1963
- We got on a high and I asked my newfound amigo if he knew a cathouse, a white cathouse. — Piri Thomas, Down These Mean Streets, p. 187, 1967
- We’re in transit, the three of us, and we could sure use the services of a decent cathouse that don’t hate G.I.’s. — Darryl Ponicsan, The Last Detail, p. 121, 1970
- She started out in one of his de-luxe AC-DC cathouses in the suburbs of Havana. — Edwin Torres, After Hours, p. 325, 1979
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