释义 |
slave noun- in a sado-masochistic relationship, a person who endures many forms of humiliation, including extreme pain and public displays of submission US
- He “loved,” he testified, to be his wife’s “slave,” to be whipped by her and forced to perform cunnilingus for a woman friend or fellatio for a visiting male, while she watched. — Michael Leigh, The Velvet Underground, p. 82, 1963
- “Pat didn’t want to be tied up, but Jane loved to be the slave.” — Robert Newton, Bondage Clubs U.S.A., p. 60, 1967
- There is also jealousy among my slaves. In America, I had three slaves, a Wall Street banker, a telephone company executive and a little printer. — Screw, p. 5, 8 February 1971
- — Wayne Dynes, Homolexis, p. 123, 1985
- — Thomas Murray, The Language of Sadomasochism, pp. 122–123, 1989
- I assured him I wasn’t slave material. — John Preston, Hustling, pp. 24–25, 1994
- a submissive prisoner who performs all types of menial tasks for others US
- “In fact, they even assigned him a slave.” “A slave?” Novak said. “A gofer. Somebody to carry messages, run errands for him. That kind of shit.” — Gerald Petievich, Shakedown, pp. 85–86, 1988
- a job US
- I didn’t mind copping a slave just then because I could use the gold[.] — Mezz Mezzrow, Really the Blues, p. 107, 1946
- — Lavada Durst, The Jives of Dr. Hepcat, p. 13, 1953
- This slave is a drag, in the bag for some old hag, but strictly nowhere for me, I swear. — Dan Burley, Diggeth Thou?, p. 11, 1959
- You mean you just want any slave you can find? — Malcolm X and Alex Haley, The Autobiography of Malcolm X, p. 44, 1964
- A guy who worked in the garment center wouldn’t say he had a job; he’d say, “Man, like, I got a slave.” That’s about what it amounted to. — Claude Brown, Manchild in the Promised Land, p. 184, 1965
- — Malachi Andrews and Paul T. Owens, Black Language, p. 79, 1973
- — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, p. 6, Fall 1980
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