释义 |
clacker noun- the backside; the anus AUSTRALIA
Probably from “clacker” a ratcheted noise-making device, alluding to farting. Not a perversion of “cloaca.” - Come on then up there, off your clackers! — J.E. MacDonnell, Don’t Gimme the Ships, p. 135, 1960
- And it still hurts to think of his size 12 boots right up my clacker. — Rex Hunt, Tall Tales–and True, p. 79, 1994
- — Paul Vautin, Turn It Up!, p. 95, 1995
- [S]he relentlessly interrogates notions of immutable identity AND takes a great big red ribbon out of her clacker. — Sydney Scope Magazine, p. 2, 2001
- a young woman; a group of young women; young women in general UK
Military. - [A] nice piece (or bit) of clacker. — Beale, 1984
- a dollar US, 1918
- Commencing shortly after the first of the year, he’ll get some 25,000 clackers per annum[.] — San Francisco Examiner, p. 19, 20 December 1945
- In Alameda County, where the officials have a thrifty eye toward the public clacker, the Supervisors and their lawyers have been recovering assessment losses. — San Francisco Examiner, p. 35, 3 February 1966
- a triggering device for claymore mines US
- — Gregory Clark, Words of the Vietnam War, p. 104, 1990
- I took out a couple of frags and placed them on the ground next to the clacker, the firing device for the claymore mine. — Larry Chambers, Recondo, p. 58, 1992
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