Dictionaries:
shtup:
Or: schtup / stup , to copulate , usually said of and by men, from the Yiddish meaning to push . Chiefly American usage. There's a Lili Von Shtup (Madeline Kahn) in Blazing Saddles (1974), a singer billed as The Teutonic Titwillow, but Harvey calls her a Teutonic Twat, and there's a Baron Von Shtup in The Great Race (1965); Jack Lemmon pronounces baron, baren. Mike O'Brien (Paul Guilfoyle) to Isaac Barr (Richard Gere) in Final Analysis (1992): ' The doctor was shtuping the accused .' Yiddish proverb: ' No chupa, no shtupa. No wedding, no bedding .' See copulation for synonyms.See Also: coming and going, gifted, schtup, shtup, stup
Quotes Containing shtup:
Lili Von Shtup (Madeline Kahn) singing I''m Tired in Blazing Saddles (1974): ''I''ve been with thousands of men / Again and again / They promise the moon / They''re always coming and gowing / And going and coming / And always too soon.''
Lili Von Shtup (Madeline Kahn) singing I''m Tired in Blazing Saddles (1974): ''I''ve been with thousands of men / Again and again / They promise the moon / They''re always coming and gowing / And going and coming / And always too soon.''
'I've been with thousands of men / Again and again / They promise the moon / They're always coming and goping / And going and coming / And always too soon.' Lili Von Shtup (Madeline Kahn) singing I'm Tired in Blazing Saddles (1974)
Lili Von Shtup (Madeline Kahn) singing I''m Tired in Blazing Saddles (1974): ''I''ve been with thousands of men / Again and again / They promise the moon / They''re always coming and gowing / And going and coming / And always too soon.''
Lili Von Shtup (Madeline Kahn) singing I''m Tired in Blazing Saddles (1974): ''I''ve been with thousands of men / Again and again / They promise the moon / They''re always coming and gowing / And going and coming / And always too soon.''
Lili Von Shtup (Madeline Kahn) singing I''m Tired in Blazing Saddles (1974): ''I''ve been with thousands of men / Again and again / They promise the moon / They''re always coming and gowing / And going and coming / And always too soon.''
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