Dictionaries:
case:
1. Shakespearean term for the vagina . William Shakespeare. The Merry Wives of Windsor : ' Vengeance on Jenny's case! ' See vagina for synonyms.2. C20 th male usage for copulate . See copulation for synonyms.
3. Or: basket case / head-case , a person in dire need of psychiatric help.
4. To have a case , in teenspeak, to be romantically attracted to or involved-with someone. See love for synonyms.
See Also: 24/7/365, abdominal pregnancy, acrotometophilia, acrotomophilia, acute prostatitis, angel with a dirty face, arrow, atresia vaginae, bacterial sexually transmitted diseases, bacterial STDs, basketful of meat, boots and shoes fetish, bot, Brown family, Browning family, Browning sisters, buggerantoes, bulldog dose, canasta, canned fruit, case, chancroid, chubby chaser, closet queer, collar, collar and lead, confused, controsexual, corespondent, cunnilinguate, dog, doodle sack, dose, a, drip, dripper, dripsy, erotica, fellate, flesh factory, Freudian, groceries, have the heebie-jeebies for, head case, heavy cruiser, herosexual, homogenic, IBM, ID, inappetence, intersexual, involutional depression, isosexual, jewelry showcase, knocker, laundry, lunch, lunch box, lunch-meat, lunchbox, main lady, meatballs, needle-book, NGU, nongonococcal urethritis, packet, protection, rifle, royal fucking, a, showcase, simulsexual, snackpack, soft chancre, soul case, twenty-four seven, unwritten law, USer, venereal sore
Quotes Containing case:
: ''It''s either me or your balls , Roger. You can''t have both.'' Peggy Schuyler (Madolyn Smith) to Roger Cobb (Steve Martin) in All of Me (1984). Roger is representing her father, his boss, in a divorce case : - Peggy:''Roger, you go to court tomorrow, we''re through!'' - Roger:''If I don''t, your father will have my balls .'' - Peggy:''Then it''s either me or your balls . You can''t have both!''
Walter Matthau as Justice Dan Snow in First Monday in October (1981): ''Just being offensive is not an offense. One man''s pornography may be another man''s poetry.'' Possibly a rewording of a famous line by Supreme Court Justice John Marshall Harlan from a 1971 case trial on free speech: ''One man''s vulgarity is another man''s lyric.''
Waldo Lydecker (Clifton Webb) in Laura (1944): ''In my case self-absorption is completely justified. I have never discovered any other subject quite so worthy of my attention.''
Sally Athelny (Frances Dee) and Philip Carey (Leslie Howard) in Of Human Bondage (1934): - Sally : ''Of course, I knew you never loved me as much as I loved you.'' - Philip: ''Yes, that''s usually the case . There''s usually one who loves and one who is loved.'' - Sally : ''It''s always the same. If you want a man to be nice to you, you have to be rotten to him.''
Sally Athelny (Frances Dee) and Philip Carey (Leslie Howard) in Of Human Bondage (1934): - Sally : ''Of course, I knew you never loved me as much as I loved you.'' - Philip: ''Yes, that''s usually the case . There''s usually one who loves and one who is loved.'' - Sally : ''It''s always the same. If you want a man to be nice to you, you have to be rotten to him.''
Sally Athelny (Frances Dee) and Philip Carey (Leslie Howard) in Of Human Bondage (1934): - Sally : ''Of course, I knew you never loved me as much as I loved you.'' - Philip: ''Yes, that''s usually the case . There''s usually one who loves and one who is loved.'' - Sally : ''It''s always the same. If you want a man to be nice to you, you have to be rotten to him.''
Sheila Kingston''s (Rosie O''Donnell) voice over commentary at the end of Exit to Eden (1994): ''So, what did I learn from this case? No matter what your sexual-preference is true-love is still the ultimate fantasy.''
Mickey Gordon (Billy Crystal) to the nurse at the fertility clinic in Forget Paris (1995): - Nurse: ''We have X-rated tapes in case you need some help.'' - Mickey : ''Help!? Hahahaha! Help? I lettered in this in high school. I used to carry a picture of my right hand in my wallet .''
Mickey Gordon (Billy Crystal) to the nurse at the fertility clinic in Forget Paris (1995): - Nurse: ''We have X-rated tapes in case you need some help.'' - Mickey : ''Help!? Hahahaha! Help? I lettered in this in high school. I used to carry a picture of my right hand in my wallet .''
Sheila Kingston's (Rosie O'Donnell) voice over commentary at the end of Exit to Eden (1994): 'So, what did I learn from this case? No matter what your sexual-preference is true-love is still the ultimate fantasy.'
Sally Athelny (Frances Dee) and Philip Carey (Leslie Howard) in Of Human Bondage (1934): - Sally : 'Of course, I knew you never loved me as much as I loved you.' - Philip: 'Yes, that's usually the case . There's usually one who loves and one who is loved.' - Sally : 'It's always the same. If you want a man to be nice to you, you have to be rotten to him.'
Lou Peckingpaugh (Peter Falk) and Marlene Duchard (Louise Fletcher) in a Casablanca-like scene in The Cheap Detective (1978): - Lou: ''I almost forgot what you look like. Day by day I erased your face from my mind, little by little, till all I had left was your right ear and three front teeth on the bottom .'' - Marlene: ''I still carry your picture in a locket. Naturally I had to cut off your head in case Paul found it .''
Clifford Stern (Woody Allen), a married man , tells his niece Jenny (Jenny Nichols) about his infatuation with Holly Reed (Mia Farrow) in Crimes and Misdemeanors (1989): ''My heart says one thing my head says another. It''s very hard to get your head and heart together in life . (...) In my case they''re not even friendly .''
Justice Dan Snow (Walter Matthau) in First Monday in October (1981): ''Just being offensive is not an offense. One man''s pornography may be another man''s poetry.'' Possibly a rewording of a famous line by Supreme Court Justice John Marshall Harlan said in a 1971 case on free speech: ''One man''s vulgarity is another man''s lyric.''
Justice Dan Snow (Walter Matthau) in First Monday in October (1981): ''Just being offensive is not an offense. One man''s pornography may be another man''s poetry.'' Possibly a rewording of a famous line by Supreme Court Justice John Marshall Harlan said in a 1971 case on free speech: ''One man''s vulgarity is another man''s lyric.''
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