Random
Source Code

oral felching

n. kissing after a gay couple has had oral sex and the receiving partner not having swallowed so the two can savor the load.

Nick never swallowed when Kelvin came in his mouth. He believed in sharing and gave back a portion of Nick's load when he kissed him after finishing sex. At a party the other night, they found out this was called oral felching.

by Richard Black May 10, 2005

27πŸ‘ 17πŸ‘Ž


manhood

n. a sense of ego regarding masculinity, feeding off the size of a man's cock or or his number of conquests or his way of having sex.

Just having thirteen inches of dangling meat was proof enough of Bam's masculinity.

Tyrone being a father to nine kids at twenty-one indicated only a part of his masculinity. Think of the number of conquests that didn't produce babies.

by Richard Black May 8, 2005

88πŸ‘ 97πŸ‘Ž


hussy

n. bitch. In the 1930s through the 1950s the term for a demanding, self-centered, hateful female.

Joan Crawford played the leading role in the movie "The Gorgeous Hussy."

You hussy; stop flirting with my husband.

by Richard Black June 12, 2005

329πŸ‘ 299πŸ‘Ž


licorice stick

A nice suckable type black cock.

Takeshia was so hot Tyrone's licorice stick melted in her mouth.

by Richard Black March 11, 2005

19πŸ‘ 39πŸ‘Ž


Mona

A phrase in Southern dialect meaning "I am going to" followed by an the rest of the infinitive and the remaining thought of a sentence.

Mona get me a sandwich as soon as I quit work.

by Richard Black August 2, 2007

57πŸ‘ 242πŸ‘Ž


watch queen

1. a gay who doesn't actively participate in a homosexual act but gets off by watching others.

2. one who watches for police, security while others engage in public sex.

3. a gay who is too old to participate in gay sex acts but still enjoys watching others.

Jerry and Jake couldn't finish each other off in the park because there were so many watch queens.

by Richard Black March 17, 2005

28πŸ‘ 5πŸ‘Ž


brassiere

The halter that elevates and holds in place human mammary glands, named for the inventor Phillipelde Brassiere.

Sometime in the mid twentieth century somebody started calling them bras, maybe because they could spell brassiere. Hardly any store advertises or customers ask for brassieres today. It's simply bra.

Dagmar had a hard time finding a store that sold 44DDD bras.

by Richard Black March 30, 2005

113πŸ‘ 22πŸ‘Ž