释义 |
▪ I. cooch, -grass obs. ff. couch, -grass. ▪ II. cooch, n. slang. Brit. |kuːtʃ|, U.S. |kutʃ| Forms: 19– cooch, 19– cootch, 19– kooch, 19– kootch [Shortened ‹coochie n. With sense 2 perhaps compare cooze n.] 1. N. Amer. = hootchy-kootchy n. Also attrib. Now chiefly hist.
1910Variety 10 Sept. 20 Her ‘cooch’..is also suggestive. 1930R. E. Sherwood This is N.Y. ii. 113 He picked her up when she was a bum cooch dancer, and he's given her everything. 1933S. Walker Night Club Era 207 Bill started a sidewalk cooch show to drag in the customers... The police didn't like it, and neither did the censors. 1950J. Lait & L. Mortimer Chicago: Confidential ii. xxi. 165 The strippers adapted the kooch as an element of the strip. 2003J. Watts Mae West ii. 47 Before long she was back to her standard routine of songs, dances, comedic monologues, and the cooch. 2. orig. N. Amer. The female genitals. Cf. cooze n. 2. In quot. 1955, referring to S. Kingsley Dead End (1936) I. 34, where the original text reads ‘yuh mudduh's chooch’.
1955W. D. Sievers Freud on Broadway x. 299 The ‘dead-end kids’, with their ‘Frig you,’ and ‘Ah, yuh muddah's cooch,’ shocked the public. 1960H. Wentworth & S. B. Flexner Dict. Amer. Slang 120/1 Cooch, the female crotch. 2001FHM Feb. 61/2 Your girlfriend's entire body, not just her cooch and nipples, is a sexual organ. |