释义 |
put out verb- to consent to sex US, 1947
- [S]he was in that profession and consequently, being a passionate actress, would “put out.” — Mark Tryon, Of G-Strings and Strippers, p. 13, 1953
- [I]t was common knowledge that this little tramp put out for every punk on the block. — Bernard Wolfe, The Late Risers, p. 46, 1954
- Nobody likes a cockteaser. Either you put out or you don’t. — Hubert Selby Jr, Last Exit to Brooklyn, p. 107, 1957
- She’s been putting out for a long time now. — Willard Motley, Let No Man Write My Epitaph, p. 178, 1958
- Sure, I’d make it with the fruits, take whatever I could from them–but I wouldn’t put out. — John Rechy, City of Night, p. 207, 1963
- None of the girls put out? — Elmore Leonard, 52 Pick-up, p. 27, 1974
- That went bye-bye down at Harwich, or wherever they were last summer when she made up her mind to put out. — George V. Higgins, Penance for Jerry Kennedy, p. 82, 1985
- She only puts out so people will hang out with her. — Ferris Buehler’s Day Off, 1986
- Some of the girls said he would go out with any girl who put out. — Tempest Storm, Tempest Storm, p. 13, 1987
- “ So Taggarty put out?” “Most enthusiastically. We were approaching the consummation of the act when the authorities broke in.” — C.D. Payne, Youth in Revolt, p. 196, 1993
- We’re in the big time now. We’re freshmen, where all the girls will be putting out. — Dazed and Confused, 1993
- Even if it’s true she [Britney Spears] doesn’t put out (hah!)[.] — The Guardian, p. 8, 12 March 2002
- to be deserving of some punishment IRELAND
- In the hall Robbie roared because Jennifer had hit him a clip he’d been putting out for. — Eamonn Sweeney, Waiting for the Healer, p. 61, 1997
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