释义 |
bone verb- to have sex from the male point of view US
- "And every time I got in the right mood to do a little boning, she got scared I be going to hurt her.” — J.J. Phillips, Mojo Hand, p. 16, 1966
- You kin change the engine on your bike, you kin paint the kitchen, you kin bone your old lady twice. — Joseph Wambaugh, The Secrets of Harry Bright, p. 191, 1985
- It’s a lot more interesting than just flinging off your clothes and boning away on the neighbor’s swing set. — Heathers, 1988
- — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, p. 1, Fall 1989
- CLARK: It’s definitely not making love! BLEEK: Boning! CLARK: You’ve been a lot more imaginative. — Mo’ Better Blues, 1990
- That’s bullshit, they all wanna bone, its human, they just don’t like admitting it to nobody except they girlfriends and all. — Boyz N The Hood, 1990
- “Make sure you wear a raincoat when you bone them broads.” — Nathan McCall, Makes Me Wanna Holler, p. 40, 1994
- That girl you boned last year. Remember? — Kids, 1995
- Been bonin’ the bitch three years man: she knows the score[.] — Nick Barlay, Curvy Lovebox, p. 54, 1997
- When we bone these gutter-sluts [...] we don’t respect them or even think of them as proper people with mums and dads and feelings and shit. — Colin Butts, Is Harry Still on the Boat?, p. 257, 2003
- [H]ow in God’s name did he manage to bone so many women? — X-Ray, August 2003
- Alone with most of the female cast, he proceeds to bone one after another after another. — Editors of Adult Video News, The AVN Guide to the 500 Greatest Adult Films of All Time, p. 62, 2005
- to interrogate a suspect UK
Police and criminal use; probably from earlier sense (to seize, to arrest). - — Bournemouth Evening Echo, 20 April 1966
- in mountain biking, to strike the nose of your seat with your buttocks US
- — William Nealy, Mountain Bike!, p. 160, 1992: “Bikespeak”
- to study intensely US, 1859
- I was back at State again, boning for my finals[.] — Chester Himes, Cast the First Stone, p. 55, 1952
- to walk fast US
- We boned out of the police station and headed to the parking lot. — Eric Jerome Dickey, Cheaters, p. 369, 1999
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