释义 |
diddle verb- (from the male perspective) to have sex US, 1870
- You want to conk me out and diddle with me while I’m helpless. — George Mandel, Flee the Angry Strangers, p. 269, 1952
- Diddle, diddle, diddle yourself. I’m no whore. — James T. Farrell, Ruth and Bertram, p. 90, 1955
- Efn’ Ah finds me some white mother-raper up here on my side of town trying to diddle my little gals Ah’m gonna cut his throat. — Chester Himes, The Real Cool Killers, p. 6, 1959
- The height of my folly/ Was diddling a collie/ But I got a nice price for the pups. — Eros, p. 62, Winter 1962
- How about you and Boo? Did you or did you not diddle her during the war? Are you or are you not still diddling her? — Max Shulman, Anyone Got a Match?, p. 253, 1964
- That’s why she keeps you around for, to diddle her fiddle. — Jim Thompson, Pop. 1280, p. 191, 1964
- I used to could diddle all night long/ but since I got the age I am/ it takes me all night to diddle. — Bruce Jackson, Get Your Ass in the Water and Swim Like Me, p. 228, 1964
- I mean, he’s got a wonderful wife and he prefers to, diddle this little yo-yo that–that, you know. — Manhattan, 1979
- Any movie that starts off with a woman being diddled by a giant katydid can’t be all bad. — Joe Bob Briggs, Joe Bob Goes to the Drive-In, p. 19, 1987
- to masturbate US, 1934
- [I]f I was you I would just go right back out that door and let her diddle herself in the powder room. — George V. Higgins, The Rat on Fire, p. 78, 1981
- She played with herself in chapel, at Holy Communion; she diddled in the confessional even as she was asking forgiveness for diddling. — Tom Robbins, Fierce Invalids Home From Hot Climates, p. 261, 2000
- Let’s say you are diligently diddling her clit with a well-lubed fingertip[.] — Jamie Goddard, Lesbian Sex Secrets for Men, p. 61, 2000
- to swindle UK, 1806
- — Louis S. Leland, A Personal Kiwi-Yankee Dictionary, p. 32, 1984
- So you were diddled. It’s happened to us all once in a while. — Jennifer Saunders, Absolutely Fabulous, p. 80, 1992
- to cheat US
- “Of course, once he spied those cut glass diamonds, he’d take in how we’d diddle him goodfashion. — Guy Owen, The Flim-Flam Man and the Apprentice Grifter, p. 163, 1972
- in computing, to make a minor change US
- Let’s diddle this piece of code and see if the problem goes away. — Guy L. Steele et al., The Hacker’s Dictionary, p. 56, 1983
- in computing, to work half-heartedly US
- I diddled a copy of ADVENT so it didn’t double-space all the time. — Eric S. Raymond, The New Hacker’s Dictionary, p. 125, 1991
▶ diddled by the dirty digit of destiny adversely affected by fate US- — Maledicta, p. 15, Summer 1977: “A word for it!”
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