释义 |
rod noun- the penis; the erect penis UK, 1902
- [Y]ou slip in your hard rod in all that squishy softness and kiss their lips[.] — Jack Kerouac, Jack Kerouac Selected Letters 1957–1969, p. 153, 19 June 1958: Letter to Gary Snyder
- It’s all right. She’s my wife. She needs black rod, is all. — Eldridge Cleaver, Soul on Ice, p. 170, 1968
- “The Spirit tells them that they blew the thing, that they should have gotten hold of his Rod–” “His Dick,” said Doc. “Yeah.” — Cecil Brown, The Life & Loves of Mr. Jiveass Nigger, p. 56, 1969
- Jim Tom said, “I’m lucky I inherited the same rod my daddy had. When he died, it took seven days to close the casket.” — Dan Jenkins, Life Its Ownself, p. 122, 1984
- The dean comes in and makes the girl perform fellatio on his “black rod” because she “pissed” on his floor. — Final Report of the Attorney General’s Commission on Pornography, p. 437, 1986
- CHINESE STUDENT: I was distracted by that enormous flying–RACHEL HUNTE: Rod? — Austin Powers, 1999
- a gun, usually a pistol US, 1903
A perfect example for those who like to ascribe phallic symbolism to the tools of man’s aggression. - Drop yer rod, Tracy. Yer covered by a machine gun that kin sweep the whole layout. — Chester Gould, Dick Tracy Meets the Night Crawler, p. 190, 1945
- In those days guys packed rods like women do lipstick; practically every hip pocket in town was a walking arsenal. — Mezz Mezzrow, Really the Blues, p. 32, 1946
- I still have a private cop’s license with the privilege to pack a rod, and they’re afraid of me. — Mickey Spillane, I, The Jury, p. 7, 1947
- I hear they found the rod what knocked off your teacher. — Irving Shulman, The Amboy Dukes, p. 262, 1947
- The Pachuco shivs Mace while the big stoop stands there all goofed off with a rod in his mitt. — Thurston Scott, Cure It With Honey, p. 160, 1951
- My boys don’t carry rods. — Hal Ellson, The Golden Spike, p. 70, 1952
- “But what you really need is a rod like this.” And he reached into his pocket again and took out a .32 Colt automatic. — Jim Thompson, Savage Night, p. 69, 1953
- You couldn’t even rob a bank, to rob a bank you needed a rod and to buy a rod you need at least twenty bucks. — Bernard Wolfe, The Late Risers, p. 7, 1954
- Lieutenant Anderson asked me last night why we stick to these old-fashioned rods when the new ones are so much better. — Chester Himes, The Real Cool Killers, p. 13, 1959
- It worried me to be part of a hustle that required a rod. — Iceberg Slim (Robert Beck), Pimp, p. 252, 1969
- — Angela Devlin, Prison Patter, p. 98, 1996
- a hired gunman US
- — R. Frederick West, God’s Gambler, p. 228, 1964: “Appendix A”
- a car modified for speed or looks; a hot rod US, 1945
- The first was a made one, with a burly blond kind in a souped-up rod. — Jack Kerouac, On the Road, p. 79, 1957
- the draw-rod underneath a railway goods wagon US, 1904
- That number is a wonderful example of what happened to the blues when they moved out of the gallion, the work-gang and the levee and rode the rods into big towns like New Orleans, Charleston, Memphis and Chi. — Mezz Mezzrow, Really the Blues, p. 45, 1946
- They came riding the rods, in boxcars, or on foot, to the great freight-yard terminals. — Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, Chicago Confidential, p. 53, 1950
- In this jet age, they prefer to transport themselves by motorcycle, the rods, and unrhymed iambics. — Bernard Wolfe, The Magic of Their Singing, p. 86, 1961
▶ had the rod wrecked; ruined AUSTRALIA Variant of HAVEHADTHEDICK- He’s had the rod now for sure. — Bluey, Bush Contractors, p. 272, 1975
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