释义 |
quickie noun- a sexual encounter that is carried out quickly US
- We had a quickie; I didn’t come & was only telling of the future where there were better bed fucks & us living contentedly as we walked slowly across town again to her home. — Neal Cassady, The First Third, p. 201, 5 November 1950
- They range from the lowest, who will come to your room for $5 for a quickie, to the most ultra, who expects $100, plus expenses, as a fee for her company for an evening, and nothing guaranteed. — Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, Washington Confidential, p. 84, 1951
- The rate starts at $100, but many of them can be bargained with, during slow periods of the day, going for a “quickie” for fifty dollars. — Ed Reid and Ovid Demaris, The Green Felt Jungle, p. 95, 1963
- We did a stand-up quickie by the refrigerator — Jefferson Poland and Valerie Alison, The Records of the San Francisco Sexual Freedom League, p. 60, 1971
- [S]ometimes Madeleine or even Georgette would call up and ask me could I handle a midday quickie. — Xaviera Hollander, The Happy Hooker, p. 92, 1972
- I call this kinda action a quickie. It happens with a guy that’s only interested in his kicks and fuck the bitch. — A.S. Jackson, Gentleman Pimp, p. 164, 1973
- Sure, Pearl Delight, but it was a quickie, because your old man has a busy day upcoming. — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), Long White Con, p. 22, 1977
- The rates here start at ten dollars, but once again this is strictly for a quickie. — Gerald Paine, A Bachelor’s Guide to the Brothels of Nevada, p. 40, 1978
- Inside are six fully pitched camping tents, where quickies are available to the Times Square outdoorsman. — Josh Alan Friedman, Tales of Times Square, p. 176, 1986
- EBBY: Got time for another quickie? MILLIE: Jesus, you got a game to pitch! EBBY: But we got three minutes! — Bull Durham, 1988
- He moved his hands over her back, feeling her body beneath the thin T-shirt, Chili thinking, It could be a quickie. — Elmore Leonard, Be Cool, p. 321, 1999
- [S]he had come home late and acted very strange. Had never turned down a quickie before. — Jack Allen, When the Whistle Blows, p. 38, 2000
- an alcoholic drink taken hastily AUSTRALIA
- I nipped into the pub for a quickie before dinner[.] — Alexander Buzo, Rooted, p. 87, 1969
- something that is accomplished quickly US, 1940
- They were riding first-class on a Delta flight from Miami to Dulles; a one-day quickie. — Carl Hiaasen, Strip Tease, p. 210, 1993
- an unexpected, quickly executed manoeuvre or piece of trickery US
- — Hyman E. Goldin et al., Dictionary of American Underworld Lingo, p. 172, 1950
- — Harry Orsman, A Dictionary of Modern New Zealand Slang, p. 105, 1999
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