释义 |
skank noun- a girl whose sole attraction is her immorality and sexual availability US
An abusive description possibly derived from “skunk”. - If you saw her on the street when she wasn’t too sick you probably’d most likely as not wouldn’t even know she was a junkie. She’s not like these other skanks around here. — James Mills, The Panic in Needle Park, p. 25, 1966
- That his sister was a royal skank who fucked for a dime. — Richard Price, The Wanderers, p. 33, 1974
- “Me, there was total respect, ’cause I was Nick’s lady. I knew he had other skanks. I mean, all the gang members have skanks.” — Gini Sikes, 8 Ball Chicks, p. 134, 1997
- “The skank was in rollers and house shoes.” — Eric Jerome Dickey, Cheaters, p. 34, 1999
- It was a totally kick-ass car. When you had a car like this you didn’t mind so much that your boyfriend was boinking a skank. — Janet Evanovitch, High Five, 1999
- She caught me with this girl and she lost her mind. It wasn’t that big a deal. It’s so unfair, to throw out six years over some skank. — The 40-Year Old Virgin, 2005
- a prostitute US
- Jeez, what a fuckin’ sorry sight. Heroin skank after heroin skank. — Christopher Brookmyre, The Sacred Art of Stealing, p. 185, 2002
- a confidence trick; a fraud UK
After SKANK - [S]he was going to be one of those girls who were always trying to pull a skank. — Donald Gorgon, Cop Killer, p. 42, 1994
- — Angela Devlin, Prison Patter, p. 105, 1996
- [N]o doubt plotting another quality skank. — Diran Abedayo, My Once Upon A Time, p. 20, 2000
- nastiness, filth US
- Virgins, I love ’em. No diseases, no loose as a goose pussy, no skank. — Kids, 1995
- methamphetamine US
- I seen a lot of people do a lot of skank and survive every duel with deal like a high-noon sheriff. — Lynn Breedlove, Godspeed, p. 19, 2002
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