释义 |
keister; keester; keyster noun- the buttocks US, 1931
From the German. - "And for all of that a lot of those top dogs are paying through the kiester starting now." — Mickey Spillane, Kiss Me Deadly, p. 67, 1952
- Want a goddam branding iron up your goddamn keyster? — Bernard Wolfe, The Late Risers, p. 200, 1954
- He said, "I ain’t paying you a ‘fin’ a night to sit on your keister." — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), Pimp, p. 104, 1969
- I don’t want to hear about resurrection or Easter / You can shove that Bible up your kiester. — Dennis Wepman et al., The Life, p. 119, 1976
- a travelling bag or satchel US, 1881
- — William Bysshe Stein, American Speech, p. 150–151, May 1959: “Notes on the cant of the telephone confidence man”
- — Ramon Adams, The Language of the Railroader, p. 89, 1977
- — Don Wilmeth, The Language of American Popular Entertainment, p. 150, 1981
- a safe US, 1913
- Wilson experimented in his garage, blasting and re-blasting the safe door until the keister was a twisted ruin. — Charles Hamilton, Men of the Underworld, p. 136, 1952
- The guys apprenticed under Denver Dick were good at what they called a keister. It’s a small safe inside of a big one. — Harry King, Box Man, p. 35, 1972
- — Bruce Jackson, Outside the Law, p. 57, 1972: “Glossary”
- I figured that they had a little floor keyster somewhere. — Bruce Jackson, Outside the Law, p. 99, 1972
- a jail or prison US, 1949
- — Joe McKennon, Circus Lingo, p. 53, 1980
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