释义 |
fag noun- a male homosexual US, 1921
Shortened from “faggot”. - But most of the pickups in Greenwich Village are those between fags and between skirted women-hunters. — Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, New York Confidential, p. 69, 1948
- I knew they’d read the journals because they said, “So you’re a big fag, eh? So you like little boys, eh?” — John Clellon Holmes, John Clellon, p. 239, 1952
- If a sucker comes up on him, he pretends to feel his leg like he was a fag. — William Burroughs, Junkie, p. 44, 1953
- I have $30 to my name & hope to earn some in Xmas rush baggageroom work if possible in this overcrowded frosty fag town[.] — Jack Kerouac, Letter to Carolyn Cassady, p. 403, 3 December 1953
- Now all you get is chromium, drunken women, fags, hostile bartenders, anxious owners who hover around the door, worried about their leather seats and the law[.] — Jack Kerouac, On the Road, p. 147, 1957
- A screaming fag afraid of his own shadow. — Mickey Spillane, Return of the Hood, p. 95, 1964
- Oh shit, I ain’t gonna screw no motherfuckin’ fag. — Piri Thomas, Down These Mean Streets, p. 55, 1967
- I recall being surprised as he was a fag or I always thought[.] — Gore Vidal, Myra Breckinridge, p. 21, 1968
- A reliable, hard-working, floor-scrubbing, bill-paying fag who doesn’t owe nothin’ to nobody. — Mart Crowley, The Boys in the Band, p. 30, 1968
- Contending that all of the defendants except Bobby Seale were “fags,” he told the Loyola Academy Boosters Club, “We’ve lost our kids in the freaking fag revolution.” — J. Anthony Lukas, The Barnyard Epithet and Other Obscenities, p. 32, 1970
- “Heard he’s a fag,” says Billy. — Darryl Ponicsan, The Last Detail, p. 88, 1970
- That was her interpretation of a lace shirt and curly hair–we’re fags. — Susan Hall, Gentleman of Leisure, p. 12, 1972
- “Hey, man, this is Liberace!” I look into the man’s face. Sonofabitch! It is the world-famous fag. — Oscar Zeta Acosta, The Revolt of the Cockroach People, p. 162, 1973
- Men shouldn’t feel like fags just because they want to have nice-looking bodies. [Quoting Arnold Schwarzenegger] — Oui, August 1977
- Pimples had a meet with a fag who–so he said–was good for a double sawbuck[.] — Herbert Huncke, The Evening Sun Turned Crimson, pp. 50–51, 1980
- John Wayne was a fag. — Repo Man, 1984
- 1–2–3–4–5–6–7. Oswald was a fag. — The Usual Suspects, 1995
- Her next boyfriend saw my Bowie poster and started calling him a fag. — Francesca Lia Block, Baby Be-Bop, p. 391, 1995
- Carol, the waitress, this is Simon, the fag. — As Good As It Gets, 1997
- “Are you some kind of a fag band? I can’t imagine a band without a drummer.” “Gay,” I say. “Nobody says ‘fag’ anymore.” “Whatever you want to call it. A queer’s still a queer.” — Darren Francis, The Sprawl [britpulp], p. 300, 1999
- “Jessie, the literature fag.” — Jerry Lewis, Labor Day Telethon for Muscular Dystrophy, 3 September 2007
- a cigarette, a cigarette butt UK, 1888
- “Say, got a fag?” asked Buddy. “Here’s a coffin nail,” Phil said, talking out of the side of his mouth and extending a pack to Buddy. — James T. Farrell, Saturday Night, p. 28, 1947
- Scott gazed forlornly at the limp fag in his lips. — Donald Wilson, My Six Convicts, p. 53, 1951
- His eyes lit on Choo-Choo’s half-smoked package of Camels on the table. “Dump out those fags,” he ordered a cop, watching Sheik’s reaction. — Chester Himes, The Real Cool Killers, p. 69, 1959
- I lays on me bed with a fag to think. — John Peter Jones, Feather Pluckers, p. 10, 1964
- He says he was sittin’ in a cell in a Southwest jail / where he landed doin’ three days for vag. / A drunk came in, his eyes lit up like a hungry pup / as I handed him a tailor-made fag. — Bruce Jackson, Get Your Ass in the Water and Swim Like Me, p. 82, 1966
- Perry goes to the kitchen for a glass of water, wanders away to his shared bedroom, puffing on the fag-end of his cigarette. — Odie Hawkins, Ghetto Sketches, p. 161, 1972
- I puffed [to smoke marijuana] before I smoked any fags. — Macfarlane, Macfarlane and Robson, The User, p. 1, 1996
- He sparked up a fag and sucked fitfully at it. — Kevin Sampson, Powder, p. 100, 1999
- a despicable, unlikeable person US
No allegation of homosexuality is inherent in this usage. - Ohmigod, I mean my fag little brother sees Jeff and goes, “Tiffany’s got her period,” and I could totally die. — Mary Corey and Victoria Westermark, Fer Shurr! How to be a Valley Girl, 1982
- — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, p. 3, Spring 1989
▷ see:FAGPACKET |