释义 |
daisy chain noun- a group of people, arranged roughly in a circle, in which each person is both actively and passively engaged in oral, anal, or vaginal sex with the person in front of and behind them in the circle US, 1927
A term that is much more common than the practice. - Past the Horseshoe Club, with its modified burlesque, and where for five bucks extra you can watch three naked women form a daisy chain on the floor of a basement room anytime after one a.m. — Rogue for Men, p. 46, June 1956
- [T]hey left and came back with cans of beer which were passed around the daisychain[.] — Hubert Selby Jr, Last Exit to Brooklyn, p. 126, 1957
- Robert Christie, mass strangler of women–sounds like a daisy chain–hanged in 1953. — William Burroughs, Naked Lunch, p. 225, 1957
- — Donald Webster Cory and John P. LeRoy, The Homosexual and His Society, p. 263, 1963: “A lexicon of homosexual slang”
- We had sort of a daisy chain, with Ned in the middle. Ned’s boyfriend performed fellation on him while Ned used his hand on me and I masturbated his friend. — Ruth Allison, Lesbianism, p. 117, 1967
- The orgy scene is to involve, primarily, three different sexual activities in the following chronological order: oral sex in a “daisy-chain” configuration with all five performers involved. — Vincent Barth, Porno Films and the People who Make Them, p. 121, 1973
- His appearance signals a nine-person orgy that features a delicious daisy-chain of joined cocks and cunts and mouths. — Adult Video, p. 29, August/September 1986
- an abstract grouping of people who have had sex with the same person at different times US
- — Connie Eble (Editor), UNC-CH Campus Slang, p. 3, Spring 1990
- figuratively and by extension, a series of events that return to the beginning US
- Randolph is suing. Stanley is suing Stuyvessant North. it’s a daisy chain. — San Francisco Call-Bulletin, p. 15, 6 May 1954
- But the cool nurse who’s no longer cool goes immediately to the feds, who’ve been talking to her anyway, and now the fucking daisy chain comes around again. — Elmore Leonard, Bandits, p. 140, 1987
- in computing, a network architecture in which a single cable connects all nodes US
- — Christian Crumlish, The Internet Dictionary, p. 47, 1995
- a confidence swindle where funds from successive victims are used to keep the swindle alive with the earlier victims US, 1985
- He has a girlfriend named Monica Brown, a con artist who’s working a gold-mine scam, a daisy chain. — Gerald Petievich, Shakedown, p. 154, 1988
- a series of (Claymore) mines attached to each other and rigged for sequential detonation UK
From the general appearance. - We used a device christened the “daisy chain”, made from gun-cotton primers threaded on a five-foot chain of prima cord [...] Five primers went to each daisy chain spaced out and held by knots in the cord. — Vladimir Peniakoff, (writing of the North Afrian campaign, 1942–3), Private Army, 1950
- — Linda Reinberg, In the Field, p. 56, 1991
- He carried ten extra claymore mines, and we spent the better part of the evening running a daisy chain that went forever. — Larry Chambers, Recondo, p. 74, 1992
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