Boots gay slang
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It became popular in the lesbian cumminty. His was an extreme case of institutionalization.
Jody: Penitentiary nickname for a man or men on the street who provide sexual fulfillment to the girlfriends or wives of inmates while those inmates are incarcerated. Men who are incarcerated use this term to play upon other inmates’ insecurities in relation to the fidelity of their wives or girlfriends.
Lifer: One serving a life sentence.
Meat on the gate: Can be used interchangeably with the term “drop it in the hole,” depending on the region, and is a reference to the solicitation of oral or anal sex in exchange for some benefit, either money or drugs.
Pocket pussy: Artificial apparatus made by heterosexual and bisexual inmates to simulate a woman’s vagina while incarcerated.
They are numbered for references purposes. Generally extremely high in sodium and carbohydrates.
Trade: Multi-purpose term used initially to describe a hetero-identified man who may occasionally engage in same sex encounters for a price, i.e. They create a world, and then other people twist it...
Learning and repeating "real-world" drag language makes me feel connected to a purely queer universe--a universe that doesn't stop to see if straight people have caught up.
anyone have any idea?!
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Phoenix is an Anglo-American contestant on RuPaul's Drag Race, Season 3; Manila is an Asian-American contestant on RuPaul's Drag Race, Season 3.
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She has mad problems.
by SVex January 17, 2005
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The sentence "For the most part it means angry" probably means that when the word "mad" is used in the United States and elsewhere, it usually means "angry".
It's mad hot today. He then cleans the latex package off, unravels it, and begins to smoke and/or sell it.
Werk or werq: A Black, gay, slang derivation of the word “work,” usually spoken by some gay men to emphasize appreciation and awe for a high level of skill and talent in an individual or group.
by M. A. Larkin March 27, 2009
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Notice that the slang word "boom" is found at the end of a sentence or as its own sentence> The slang word "boots" is used the same way.
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Here's what I think that portions of that entry mean: The second sentence of that entry probably means that "the exclamatory function of the word "boom" isn't as strong as the same function of the exclamation mark.
I have to not use ‘miss’ or ‘she’ for everything because people don’t understand what I mean, and like my parents aren’t going to understand queer slang because they’re straight older people (laughs).”
Background/Context:
My informant is my roommate. The inmate, hours later or perhaps the next day, gets the drugs out of his body by “taking a shit,” and then, with a latex-glove-wrapped hand, sifts through the fecal matter until he finds the package.
like, opportunity, freedom, money, and access)."
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Added May 16, 2015: DEFINITIONS AND EXAMPLE OF "TOOT" AND "BOOT" AND "TOP TOOT"
"Toot" and "boot" are two determinations that are used in the YouTube video series "RuPaul's Drag Race Fashion Photo RuView". Including in those comments was this explanation from cottonbiscuit about the term "the house down":
"The House Down- Emphasis usually used at the end of a sentence.
And, given that, even they are constantly evolving into new forms and meanings. It is when someone, intentionally or not, uses the name they used before transitioning. African and African American language has a hallmark of wonderful fluidity and redefinition. My friendly re-write of that would be that the word "boom" is usually used informally.
[–]alextyrian
Manila said somewhere that she uses "the house down" and "boots" as exclamation points, sometimes together. Two excerpts from those discussions are included in that Addendum. “
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Here's my translation" of that discussion title into standard American English: "Tammie Brown's Banjee Girl realness look was excellent.
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