assling
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See also: Assling
English
[edit]Etymology 1
[edit]Verb
[edit]assling
- present participle and gerund of assle
Noun
[edit]assling (uncountable)
- The act of loafing around; hesitation
Etymology 2
[edit]Noun
[edit]assling (plural asslings)
- (pejorative and offensive when applied to people) A small or young ass (all senses)
- 1843, Jean Henri Merle d'Aubigné, Jacob Jan Le Roy, History of the Reformation in the sixteenth century:
- Already had Lecouturier, commonly called, from his Latin name, Sutor, taken the lead by launching against Erasmus, from his solitary chartreux cell, a publication replete with violence, in which he called his opponents theologasters, and asslings, imputing to them scandals, heresies, and blasphemies.
- 2012, Avram Davidson, The Island Under the Earth:
- […] only sometimes at night she murmured or cried out in strange syllables Stag took to be her native tongue: but not often, not for long), the ass-man and the laden onagers — big, healthy, sandy or reddish-colored beasts: different from the stunty gray asslings of the Northern Capes — and rested at the corner.
- 2016, Z.A. Maxfield, Deep Deliverance:
- “These are entitled asslings, you realize? They found out they could get cash if they turned rogues over to the big pharma companies. […] ”