释义 |
cunt noun- the vagina UK, 1230
The most carefully avoided, heavily tabooed word in the English language. - I bet her cunt is juicy & ripe, hunh? — Neal Cassady, The First Third, p. 197, 1950
- O Tania, where now is that warm cunt of yours, those fat, heavy garters, those soft, bulging thighs? — Henry Miller, Tropic of Cander, p. 5, 1961
- One way to a girl’s mind is through her cunt. — Richard Neville, Play Power, p. 92, 1970
- The Phoenix Art Gallery in Berkeley is a perfect example of how men find excuses to portray women as cunts. — The Berkeley Tribe, p. 5, 26 June–3 July 1970
- You know: well-scrubbed, blonde bangs, china blue eyes, apple cheeks, little cunt that smells like a gouda cheese. — Tom Robbins, Another Roadside Attraction, p. 78, 1971
- Many women today do freely use words like “fuck,” “cunt,” “prick” in bed and on the street. — Screw, p. 7, 1 July 1972
- Every time I see your dick I see her cunt in my bed. — Marianne Faithfull, Why’d Ya Do It, 1979
- The Melody girls orchestrate their stripteases over five-song cassette sound tracks; the generous ones reach cunt by the fourth number, while the ones who fancy themselves jazz ballerinas wait till the fifth. — Josh Alan Friedman, Tales of Times Square, p. 9, 1986
- Then he said, “Allright bitch, I want to taste a little bit of your cunt.” — Final Report of the Attorney General’s Commission on Pornography, p. 437, 1986
- ROBIN: Well, you know I’m not going to say it. JANE: Oh, come on! C-U-N-T. Come on, please? ROBIN: I don’t think so. — Boys on the Side, 1995
- She talked to me for a half-hour more about the word “cunt” and when she was finished, I was a convert. I wrote this for her. — Eve Ensler, The Vagina Monologues, p. 84, 1998
- a woman, especially as an object of sexual desire UK, 1674
- And do you know that the same thing happened to that dumb little cunt. — Jack Kerouac, On the Road (The Original Scroll), p. 284, 1951
- After that, Mexico, and this time a cunt will live with me. — Jack Kerouac, Letter to Neal Cassady, p. 400, April 1953
- And those rotten bitches. Two cent cunt. — Hubert Selby Jr, Last Exit to Brooklyn, p. 55, 1957
- Somewhere in the middle of Missouri, for the first time, this sailor, who never called a woman a woman if he could call her a cunt, and a Negro a nigger (I’d advertised for him in the New York Times), finally boiled over. — Clancy Sigal, Going Away, p. 175, 1961
- Next to Miss Destinee’s pad theres this real swell cunt an she walks aroun all day in her brassiere–standing by the window[.] — John Rechy, City of Night, p. 105, 1963
- Jesus, I don’t know anyone who has stuff to waste on high-school cunt. — Malcolm Braly, On the Yard, p. 28, 1967
- Ha, you bet your sweet ass they could be improved! Get some halfway decent cunt in there for openers! — Terry Southern, Blue Movie, p. 25, 1970
- In the beginning, Estelle had been just another cunt by the roadside as likely to give the clap to him as the other way around. — Gurney Norman, Divine Right’s Trip (Last Whole Earth Catalog), p. 43, 1971
- And all because of a stupid blond cunt in a cold water flat who knew how to assauge his sex problems[.] — Mickey Spillane, Last Cop Out, p. 7, 1972
- I shouted from the audience, “You’re nothing but eight assholes and a token cunt!!” — Larry Flynt, An Unseemly Man, p. 192, 1996
- “Some cunt phoned for you.” “Any cunt could do that.” — Brian Preston, Pot Planet, p. 88, 2002
- sex with a woman UK, 1670
- [A]t the same time depriving him of cunt and subjecting him to homosex stimulation[.] — William Burroughs, Naked Lunch, p. 27, 1957
- They would run down a story to them about selling them some cunt from some of the finest bithces they ever saw. — Claude Brown, Manchild in the Promised Land, p. 160, 1965
- All the cats laughed at me all the way to Frisco, “Ole Babs spent Fifty Dollars and still didn’t get no cunt, so that makes Babs a trick.” — Babs Gonzales, Movin’ On Down De Line, p. 22, 1975
- [P]rostitutes are our political prisoners–in jail for cunt. — Kate Millett, The Prostitution Papers, p. 111, 1976
- a despicable person, female or male UK, 1860
When used as a reductive term of abuse, “cunt” is usually more offensive than the male equivalents. - He’s just a great big lazy cunt. — Sumner Locke Elliott, Rusty Bugles, p. 28, 1948
- I was hi she was nice to me instead of being antagonistic as per most cunts, & she looks fine, what tits & slim body. — Neal Cassady, The First Third, p. 197, 5 1950
- She said, “Please don’t tell me my son is dead.” / I said, “If you don’t believe it, cunt, look at the hole in his head.” — Bruce Jackson, Get Your Ass in the Water and Swim Like Me, p. 50, 1964
- I glance at his Mercedes-Benz–capitalist swine, barbiturate pushing pig, member of the suburban nouveau riche, cunt. — Kevin Mackey, The Cure, p. 40, 1970
- Do you know what that cunt said? — Eve Babitz, Eve’s Hollywood, p. 117, 1974
- “Listen, cunt,” I tell him, “what’s in this envelope is all you get for your favours.” — Ted Lewis, Jack Carter’s Law, p. 7, 1974
- DEREK: I said “you cunt.” I said “you fucking cunt.” I said “who are you fucking calling cunt, cunt?” CLIVE: Yeah? What did he say, cunt? DEREK: He said “you fucking cunt.” — Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, Derek & Clive (Live), 1976
- This is no fucking good to me, you cunts treating me like an ani-mal. — Ray Denning, Prison Diaries, p. 31, 1978
- You titless cunt! — Robert English, Toxic Kisses, p. 5, 1979
- Her new husband makes potato chips. And she’s a cunt. — Armistead Maupin, Babycakes, p. 206, 1984
- What’s a man got to do? Go ‘n talk to some cunt in Parliament? — Peter Corris, Make Me Rich, p. 105, 1985
- You talk like a pissed-off dishwasher: “Fuck those cunts and their fucking tips.” — Reservoir Dogs, 1988
- Both bookies then slept, content that those smart arse dago cunts would get their comeuppance come Slipper time. — Clive Galea, Slipper, p. 209, 1988
- “Last time I vote for those bastards,” exclaimed one distraught resident. “Cunts promised us no aircraft noise if they got into office.” — Linda Jaivin, Rock n Roll Babes from Outer Space, p. 289, 1996
- [I]t’s always nice to get a result over those [wheel] clamping cunts, ain’t it? — Dave Courtney, Raving Lunacy, p. 88, 2001
- I tabulated the votes and you’re all a pack of cunts! I didn’t get one measly vote in that category. — Inpress Magazine, p. 58, 4 April 2002
- “You fucking Communist cunt, get out of here,” he [Richard Mellon Scaife] said to Karen Rothmyer of the Columbia Journalism Review. — Al Franken, Lies, p. 132, 2003
- You’re a terrific person. You’re my favorite person. But every once in a while, you can be a real cunt. — Kill Bill, 2003
- among homosexuals, a boy or young man as a sexual object US, 2004
- among homosexuals, the buttocks, anus and rectum US
- Move your cunt–Mama wants to sit down. — Bruce Rodgers, The Queens’ Vernacular, p. 57, 1972
- among homosexuals, the mouth US
- Close your filthy cunt; I don’t want to hear any more about it. — Bruce Rodgers, The Queens’ Vernacular, p. 57, 1972
- a person you admire or pretend to grudgingly admire; a form of address between friends UK
Mainly jocular usage. - So he’d whizzed up (laced with amphetamines) all the sandwiches, bless him. Cunt. — Dave Courtney, Raving Lunacy, p. 139, 2001
- an idiot, a fool UK, 1922
- If you want to get on, become a stupid cunt, the Establishment will love you. London’s full of them. — Robin Page, Down Among the Dossers, p. 115, 1973
- [T]hey ask for my name, and like a cunt I give it to them without thinking[.] — James Hawes, Dead Long Enough, p. 219, 2000
- Stony-faced she is. Only cracks up once she’s made a cunt out of you. — Kevin Sampson, Clubland, p. 47, 2002
- to a drug addict, a vein used for injecting a drug, especially the vein found on the inside of the elbow US
- [I]t looks like a small purple cyst . . . into which she drives the needle each time she fixes. “That’s your cunt, Jody,” I said once[.] — Alexander Trocchi, Cain’s Book, p. 31, 1960
- CUNT: An area of vein that is favored for injections — Elizabeth Finn, Drugs in the Tenderloin, 1967: Glossary of Drug Slang Used in the Tenderloin
- — Stewart L. Tubbs and Sylvia Moss, Human Communication, p. 119, 1974
- an unfortunate or difficult situation; an unpleasant task; a problem UK, 1931
A logical extension of earlier, still current senses (an irritating person or object). - What a cunt, though, if the geezer got so stoned one night that he tried to take out the wrong eye? — Dave Courtney, Raving Lunacy, p. 4, 2001
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