Citations:windfucker
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English citations of windfucker
The common kestrel (Falco tinnunculus)
[edit]- 1622 (first performance), William Shakespeare; William Rowley [probably by William Rowley alone], The Birth of Merlin; or, The Childe hath Found His Father. As it hath been Several Times Acted with Great Applause. Written by William Shakespear and William Rowley, London: Printed by Tho[mas] Johnson for Francis Kirkman and Henry Marsh, and are to be sold at the Princes Arms in Chancery-Lane, published 1662, →OCLC, Act IV, scene i:
- Yes, and a Goſhawk was his father, for ought we know, for I am ſure his mother was a Wind-fucker.
- In an 1869 version, the word is indicated as wind-sucker.
- Yes, and a Goſhawk was his father, for ought we know, for I am ſure his mother was a Wind-fucker.
- 2008, Sascha Aurora Akhtar, The Grimoire of Grimalkin, Cambridge: Salt Publishing, →ISBN, page 57:
- A cock-up of monumental proportions arming this overgrown embryo & so the stars align & geomancers tell of time being ripe to catch the big fish of desiderare before the windfucker does.