释义 |
clam noun- the vagina US, 1916
- I was gobblin’ her clam like it was the last supper. — Richard Price, The Wanderers, p. 37, 1974
- Imagine bein’ the lucky guy lucky enuff to remove her straps before nuzzlin’ her knockers and then proceeding south to dig for clam! — Richard Meltzer, A Whore Just Like the Rest, p. 367, 1977
- Further down the beach, a beautiful woman was sunning as three tourists with camcorders zoomed in on her shaved clam. — Anka Radakovich, The Wild Girls Club, p. 78, 1994
- I will not shake my clam in front of a tragically hip East Village audience for $35 a night when I can be doing the same in Jersey for $300 a night. — James Ridgeway, Red Light: Inside the Sex Industry, p. 153, 1996
- [A] hot and humid shower scene that steams Genevieve straight down to her clam. — Mr. Skin, Mr. Skin’s Skincyclopedia, p. 88, 2005
- the anus US
- — Maledicta, p. 197, 1983: “Ritual and personal insults in stigmatized subcultures”
- the mouth US, 1825
- “You better open your clams and talk.” — Herbert Simmons, Corner Boy, p. 225, 1957
- — J.E. Lighter, The Historical Dictionary of American Slang, p. 426, 1994
- a dollar US, 1886
- I take him for fifty clams a day. — Horace McCoy, Kiss Tomorrow Good-bye, p. 354, 1948
- “Connie,” Mort said, “got fifteen clams on you?” — Bernard Wolfe, The Late Risers, p. 28, 1954
- Oh, it ain’t going to cost nothing, like something like little old two million clams. — William “Lord” Buckley, Hip Einie, 1955
- “So I beat him for about ten thousand clams,” he told Bea finally. — George Clayton Johnson, Ocean’s Eleven, p. 102, 1960
- I laugh and we move up the street to Hermes where I buy a hideous purse that looks just like a doctor’s bag for five hundred clams. — Julia Phillips, You’ll Never Eat Lunch in this Town Again, p. 148, 1991
- Thousand, yes, bones or clams or whatever you call them. — The Big Lebowski, 1998
- a betting chip in a poker game US
- — George Percy, The Language of Poker, p. 21, 1988
- in a musical performance, a missed cue or an off-key note US, 1955
- — Robert S. Gold, A Jazz Lexicon, p. 58, 1964
- — David Shenk and Steve Silberman, Skeleton Key, p. 39, 1994
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