释义 |
queer noun- a homosexual man or a lesbian US, 1914
Usually pejorative, but also a male homosexual term of self-reference within the gay underground and subculture. - I am not a fool! a queer! I am not! — Jack Kerouac, Letter to Neal Cassady, p. 167, 3 October 1948
- Is he a queer? Doesn’t he act like one though! — John Clellon Holmes, Go, p. 25, 1952
- The door was opened by a large, flabby, middle-aged queer, with tattooing on his forearms and even on the backs of his hands. — William Burroughs, Junkie, p. 21, 1953
- There were plenty of queers. — Jack Kerouac, On the Road, p. 73, 1957
- “And a little hash,” added Jean-baby. “There was a little hashish in the can, too.” Frost shuddered. “Goddamn queers!” he said. — Terry Southern, Flash and Filigree, p. 121, 1958
- There was this queer standing naked in front of him. — Frank Norman, Bang to Rights, p. 71, 1958
- The homosexual, who was playing hard to get, came to one masquerade party dressed as Tinkerbelle, the good fairy. He was what the other queers called a screamer. — Phyllis and Eberhard Kronhausen, Sex Histories of American College Men, p. 184, 1960
- Then I remembered that was an illiberal thing to say, and argued that even if he was a queer they shouldn’t hold it against him. They did. — Clancy Sigal, Going Away, p. 150, 1961
- Miss Smith was encompassed by two girl secretaries and a queer. — Mickey Spillane, Me, Hood!, p. 28, 1963
- I scarcely heard Lucy as he chattered on and on bringing me up to date on the romances and happenings among the queers I had deserted. — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), Mama Black Widow, p. 25, 1969
- A cop knelt and kissed the feet of a priest / And a queer threw up at the sight of that[.] — David Bowie, Five Years, 1972
- The slogan “Dyke + fag = queer” was common. — William Stewart, Cassell’s Queer Companion, 1995
- Little did they realise they were dancing [the twist] the way the queers did in Harlem. And black queers at that! — Simon Napier-Bell, Black Vinyl White Powder, p. 177, 2001
- counterfeit money US, 1812
- I was sure that Hertert wanted to use this fellow as a shover of the queer, or the man who was to pass the fake currency. — William J. Spillard and Pence James, Needle in a Haystack, pp. 54–55, 1945
- The limo back seat is gizmoed, and I copped Jake’s hundred and twenty grand in “queer” and the valises. — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), Long White Con, p. 212, 1977
- — Joe McKennon, Circus Lingo, p. 74, 1980
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