释义 |
willy noun- a tantrum AUSTRALIA, 1941
Generally in the phrases “chuck” or “throw a willy”. - — Harvey E. Ward, Down Under Without Blunder, p. 48, 1967
- — Jim Ramsay, Cop It Sweet!, p. 96, 1977
- [They] will long remember the day mum “blew her top”, “snapped her twig”, “popped her cork”, “hit the roof”, “did her block” and “chucked a willy”. — Nancy Keesing, Lily on the Dustbin, p. 184, 1982
- a wallet AUSTRALIA, 1967
- Upon hitting the bitumen he took stock of what he had left in his willy. — Ryan Aven-Bray, Ridgey Didge Oz Jack Lang, p. 15, 1983
- the penis UK, 1905
Originally northern English, not dialect, for “a child’s penis” or a childish name for any penis. Adopted by adults as a jocular reference, now widely used as a non-offensive and broadcastable term. The spelling “willie” is also used. - She couldn’t stand the thought of my willie going limp. — Robert Byrne, McGoorty, p. 59, 1972
- “ET hasn’t got a willie,” observes Linda[.] — New Society, 23 December 1982
- I don’t call it chilly / When I got a frozen willy / I call it de Ice Age[.] — Benjamin Zephaniah, The Cold War, p. 26, 1992
- Look, Orson, I’m not asking for a movie with a Swedish director and subtitles, but I’m as serious as a tumor on your willy. — Joseph Wambaugh, Finnegan’s Week, p. 11, 1993
- [W]ondering if Enid Sheard had enjoyed her last willy and if she missed it and how that would explain quite a bit. — David Peace, Nineteen Seventy-Four, p. 64, 1999
- Ben [a dog] was trying to lick her face again [...] not after licking his willy[.] — John King, White Trash, p. 19, 2001
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