Dictionaries:
job:
To copulate ; dated colloquialism derived from the standard sense of the word meaning to work .SEE ALSO: blow-job ; head-job ; on-the-job . See copulation for synonyms.
See Also: 411, 9 to 5, 9-5-er, actress, alley affair, alley number, axillary intercourse, axillism, B.J., bagpipe, bagpiping, bang-up, big J, big jobbies, big jobs, BJ, BJLs, BJM, BLJ, blow job, blowing, boink, brown, buccal intercourse, buccal onanism, butt slammer, coitus in axilla, coitus in ore, coitus oralis, couch audition, D.I.Y., defecation, doing a hand job, French, French art(s), French culture(s), gum-job, hand gig, hand job, he-man, high Russian, high Texan, huffle, huffling, hummer, in-and-out, job, labiate, little jobs, maschalation, milk cow, mouth love, mouth-genital sex, mouthlove, night work, nine-to-five, nine-to-fiver, oragenital sex, oral coitus, oral copulation, oral eroticism, oral genitalism, oral intercourse, oral sex, oral stimulation, oral titillation, oral-genital sex, oralism, orogenital sex, orolabial stimulation, penis-to-armpit intercourse, protection, push-over, pushover, rocks, slob-job, soft leg, soft roll, spanking the monkey, stern approach, street girl, street walker, street whore, street worker, streetwalker, streetwalking, streetwalking prostitute, super J, velvet job, wack job, walk the streets, whack job
Quotes Containing job:
Beatrice Skeffington (Bette Davis) quoting her husband in Mr. Skeffington (1944): ''Job says that a woman is beautiful only when she is loved.''
Morticia (Anjelica Huston) to Gomez (Raul Julia) in The Addams Family (1991): ''Don''t torture yourself, Gomez. That''s my job .''
Nan Prescott (Joan Blondell) to Vivian Rich (Claire Dodd) in Footlight Parade (1933): ''As long as they have sidewalks, you''ve got a job .''
Nan Prescott (Joan Blondell) to Vivian Rich (Claire Dodd) in Footlight Parade (1933): ''As long as they have sidewalks, you''ve got a job .''
Karen (R. Shugart) in Summer Job (1989): 'I can tell you're a man , and a friendly one at that, or that's a pickle in your pocket.'
''As long as they have sidewalks, you''ve got a job .'' Nan Prescott (Joan Blondell) to Vivian Rich (Claire Dodd) in Footlight Parade (1933).
''As long as they have sidewalks, you''ve got a job .'' Nan Prescott (Joan Blondell) to Vivian Rich (Claire Dodd) in Footlight Parade (1933).
Lisa Fremont (Grace Kelly) to Jeff/L.B. Jeffries (James Stewart) about Miss Torso, an attractive woman surrounded by men in Rear Window (1954): ''I''d say she''s doing a woman''s hardest job ; juggling wolves.''
Adrian Cronauer (Robin Williams) to Sgt. Mj. Dickerson (J.T. Walsh) in Good Morning, Vietnam (1987): ''You''re in more dire need of a blow-job than any white man in history.''
Lawrence Paros in The Erotic Tongue (1984): ''The professionals helped forge a common tongue . A man now had his joint copped, had some derby , or had his hat nailed to the ceiling. More frequently, men spoke of being blown or having a blow-job (all since early 20th C).''
'A snatch job hey?' Ronnie Jackson (Bob Hope) to Carlotta Montay (Dorothy Lamour) in My Favorite Brunette (1947). He's referring to a kidnapping.
Clarence Day (William Powell) having a father-to-son talk about women with Clarence, Jr. (Jimmy Lydon) in Life with Father (1947): - Clarence Sr.: 'All you have to do is be firm.' - Clarence Jr.: 'Yes, but Father, what can you do when they cry?' And later: 'You see Clarence, we men have to run this world and it's not an easy job . It takes work and it takes thinking. A man has to reason things out . Now, you take a woman . A woman thinks... No, I'm wrong right there. A woman doesn't think at all. She get's stirred up .'
Clarence Day (William Powell) having a father-to-son talk about women with Clarence, Jr. (Jimmy Lydon) in Life with Father (1947): - Clarence Sr.: ''All you have to do is be firm.'' - Clarence Jr.: ''Yes, but Father, what can you do when they cry?'' And later: ''You see Clarence, we men have to run this world and it''s not an easy job . It takes work and it takes thinking. A man has to reason things out . Now, you take a woman . A woman thinks... No, I''m wrong right there. A woman doesn''t think at all. She get''s stirred up .''
Clarence Day (William Powell) having a father-to-son talk about women with Clarence, Jr. (Jimmy Lydon) in Life with Father (1947): - Clarence Sr.: 'All you have to do is be firm.' - Clarence Jr.: 'Yes, but Father, what can you do when they cry?' And later: 'You see Clarence, we men have to run this world and it's not an easy job . It takes work and it takes thinking. A man has to reason things out . Now, you take a woman . A woman thinks... No, I'm wrong right there. A woman doesn't think at all. She get's stirred up .'
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