释义 |
slip verb- to give birth to a child AUSTRALIA
- Him and his missus hit town six months ago. Ten minutes after they got in, she slipped her thirteenth. — Walter Gill, Petermann Journey, p. 14, 1968
- to act inappropriately US, 1993
- — The Bell (Paducah Tilghman High School), p. 8–9, 17th December: “Tilghmanism: the concealed language of the hallway”
- to insult someone in a semi-formal quasi-friendly competition US
- There are many different terms for playing the dozens, including “bagging, capping, cracking, dissing, hiking, joning, ranking, ribbing, serving, signifying, slipping, sounding and snapping”. — James Haskins, The Story of Hip-Hop, p. 54, 2000
▶ slip a fatty to have sex UK- — Tom Hibbert, Rockspeak!, p. 59, 1983
▶ slip a lock to open a locked door by sliding a plastic credit card between the door and jamb and then sliding the lock open US- “Christ, I slipped the lock!” Al Mackey held up his laminated police ID card, the corners chewed by the door latch. — Joseph Wambaugh, The Glitter Dome, p. 21, 1981
▶ slip her a length (from the male perspective) to have sex with a woman UK, 1949- What you doing then, slipping her a length? — Greg Williams, Diamond Geezers, p. 182, 1997
- She’s a fuckin’ dyke. But I wouldn’t mind slipping her a length of Cockney! — Stuart Browne, Dangerous Parking, p. 45, 2000
▶ slip it to (of a male) to have sex with someone US Euphemistic and naughty, both at once.- I’ll bet she won’t say no if you try to slip it to her. — Jim Thompson, The Killer Inside, p. 51, 1952
- He slips it to the kid good and proper[.] — Angelo d’Arcangelo, The Homosexual Handbook, p. 229, 1968
- Could my father have been slipping it to this lady on the side? — Philip Roth, Portnoy’s Complaint, p. 92, 1969
▶ slip one to (of a male) to have sex with someone UK- [H]e was slipping one to Denise in the travel agent’s at the time. — Danny King, The Burglar Diaries, p. 79, 2001
▶ slip the pork from the male perspective, to have sex US- Never slipped her the pork—just friends!—but she once gave me a pubic hair that I still got mounted somewhere. — Richard Meltzer, A Whore Just Like the Rest, p. 272, 1976
▶ slip to cogs to become mentally imbalanced US- “Christ almighty, you’ve finally slipped your cogs. Lady, you’re nuts!” — Robert Lipkin, A Brotherhood of Outlaws, p. 136, 1981
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