释义 |
bottle verb- to attack someone with a bottle, especially in the face UK, 1984
- He’s had threats saying one of them will bottle him or stab him. — Wimbledon Guardian, 24 January 2002
- to lose your nerve, to back down UK
A contraction of BOTTLE OUTBOTTLE - [H]is firm were not bottling this time around. — Martin King and Martin Knight, The Naughty Nineties, p. 158, 1999
- [T]hey are just about to get to TOOTHLESS’S cell [...] LEE: Still clear? BACON: Yeah. Don’t bottle it. — Chris Baker and Andrew Day, Lock, Stock... & A Good Slopping Out, p. 410, 2000
- Did he think I was going to bottle it? — Jimmy Stockin, On The Cobbles, p. 34, 2000
- Two blondes grabbed me and tried to take me into the bathroom [...] I bottled it and shat myself. — The Guardian, p. 4, 28 June 2004
- to have anal sex, especially with a woman UK, 1961
From rhyming slang BOTTLE AND GLASSARSE - of a man, to have sex with a woman; to impregnate a woman UK, 1961
- to lick someone’s anus UK, 1984
Homosexual use; from rhyming slang BOTTLE AND GLASSARSE - to smell badly, to stink UK
- — Patrick O’Shaughnessy, Market Traders’ Slang, 1979
- in prison, to conceal articles such as drugs or money in the rectum UK
From rhyming slang BOTTLE AND GLASSARSE - — Angela Devlin, Prison Patter, p. 30, 1996
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