Citations:chickenhead

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English citations of chickenhead

Noun: "a woman who performs fellatio; by extension, a woman considered unintelligent and promiscuous"

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1997 1998 2003 2004 2007 2009
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1997 — Nancy Jo Sales, "Lost in the Park", New York Magazine, 16 June 1997:
    In a world run by brash, swaggering boys, girls are referred to as "shook ones" — sluts — or "chickenheads" — silly, flirty, hangers-on.
    Daphne Abdela wasn't ever considered a chickenhead.
  • 1997 — Nancy Jo Sales, "The Sex Trap", New York Magazine, 29 September 1997:
    "And suddenly before I know, she's, like, under a bridge with these three guys, and legend has it they went in the woods and they did all kinds of unbelievable stuff, and she came back with this reputation for being the biggest chickenhead slut. And she can't even go in the park now. []
  • 1998 — Charles Aaron, "Singles", Spin, April 1998:
    While you're out mispronouncing overpriced champagne with some chickenhead in a Moschino knock-off, this overweight lover is eating you out of house and home as a sweet O' Jays song ("Darlin' Darlin' Baby") skips on the record player.
  • 1998 — "Bobbito plays the tracks, Rosario Dawson states the facts", Vibe, June/July 1998:
    This year, she stars in Spike Lee's He Got Game, playing, in her own words, "Ray Allen's little chickenhead girlfriend with yellow nails. Word is bond."
  • 2003 — Tariq Nasheed, Play or Be Played: What Every Female Should Know About Men, Dating, and Relationships, Simon and Schuster (2003), →ISBN, page 66:
    A woman may be a full-fledged chickenhead, but in her own mind, she is classy. However, the men she deals with are still going to step to her on a chickenhead level.
  • 2004 — Treasure E. Blue, Harlem Girl Lost, One World Books (2004), →ISBN, page xv:
    If I could get a dollar for every time these same cats called you a chickenhead (extra crispy at that) after they twisted you out, I'd be one rich sumptin'-sumptin'
  • 2004 — Eric Pete, Gets No Love, Penguin (2004), →ISBN, page 75:
    "One more thing. If you call Val a chickenhead one more time, I'm going to…"
    "To what?" he asked, putting the remainder of his cigar out.
  • 2007 — Dwayne D. Birch, Shattered Souls, Strebor Books (2007), →ISBN, page 43:
    As far as I'm concerned, any woman who plays herself is a chickenhead, and how you gonna expect me to respect a chickenhead?
  • 2007 — J. Harvey, "Lindsay Lohan’s Rockin’ Cokeless New Year’s Eve", Socialite Life, 24 October 2007:
    Just get some chickenhead in a red and blonde wig with some painted freckles to stand up on a banquette in strobelights for ten seconds and blow some dry ice around her.
  • 2009 — Peter Leonard, Trust Me, Macmillan (2009), →ISBN, pages 75-76:
    He'd just been thinking about jackin' something, ride downtown to the Ethnic Festival, rip off some Grosse Point chickenhead wore those outfits all pink and green and yellow, look like tropical birds come to the inner city, sample exotic African favorites like spare ribs.

Noun: "a bulbous protrusion on a rock face"

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1987 1989 1999
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1987 — "Mountain Talk", Los Angeles Times, 15 July 1987:
    Chickenhead or Knob--An outcropping of rock that is easy to grab, step or tie off on.
  • 1989 — Michael A. Strassman & John McMullen, The Basic Essentials of Rock Climbing, ICS Books (1989), →ISBN, page 40:
    When varnish is eroded, a horn or chickenhead will form. A chickenhead resembles its namesake: a bulbous protrusion with a thin neck. If the neck of the chickenhead is varnished then these formations can be trusted.
  • 1999 — Stewart M. Green, Rock Climbing Arizona, Globe Pequot (1999), →ISBN, page 127:
    This excellent, chickenhead-festooned dome, also called What's My Line Dome, sits northwest and across the canyon from the Rockfellow Domes. Its southeast-facing slab offers What's My Line, one of Arizona's must-do, all-time classic routes. The crackless face appears intimidating, but closer inspection reveals a line of huge chickenhead holds up the wall.
  • 1999 — John Long, Close Calls: Climbing Mishaps & Near-Death Experiences, Globe Pequot (1999), →ISBN, page 107:
    A suave climber, though systematically moronic, Timothy had no sooner highstepped onto the chickenhead than it popped.