cock-teaser

cock-teaser
ˈcock-teaser 7 [cock-teaser] (also ˈcock-tease, ˈprick-teaser, ˈprick-tease) noun (taboo, slang)
an offensive word used to describe a woman who makes a man think she will have sex with him when she will not
See also:prick-tease prick-teaser

Useful english dictionary. 2012.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • cock-teaser — n a slightly more polite version of prick tease(r) …   Contemporary slang

  • cock-teaser* —   Woman who tries to excite one sexually but stops short of sexual intercourse …   A concise dictionary of English slang

  • cock-tease — ˈcock teaser 7 [cock teaser] (also ˈcock tease, ˈprick teaser, ˈprick tease) noun (taboo …   Useful english dictionary

  • cock — {{11}}cock (n.1) male chicken, O.E. cocc male bird, O.Fr. coc (12c., Mod.Fr. coq), O.N. kokkr, all of echoic origin. O.E. cocc was a nickname for one who strutted like a cock, thus a common term in the Middle Ages for a pert boy, used of… …   Etymology dictionary

  • prick-teaser — prickˈ teaser same as ↑cockteaser (see under ↑cock1). • • • Main Entry: ↑prick * * * ˈprick teaser 7 [prick teaser] (also ˈprick tease …   Useful english dictionary

  • prick-teaser — n a potential sex partner who excites sexual arousal without allowing consummation. This phenomenon, usually in the context of male female encounters, is paralleled by the French chauffe cul and the synon ymous cock tease, cock teaser in Eng l… …   Contemporary slang

  • prick-tease — ˈprick teaser 7 [prick teaser] (also ˈprick tease) noun (taboo …   Useful english dictionary

  • prick* —  1. Penis.  2. Abusive or contemptuous term (applied to men).  3. prick teaser. See cock teaser …   A concise dictionary of English slang

  • prick-tease — n a potential sex partner who excites sexual arousal without allowing consummation. This phenomenon, usually in the context of male female encounters, is paralleled by the French chauffe cul and the synon ymous cock tease, cock teaser in Eng l… …   Contemporary slang

  • cockchafer —    Not a term which is habitually used as a vocative, though an interesting example occurs in Lucky Jim, by Kingsley Amis. Jim Dixon is careful to address the head of the history department by his professional title to his face, but Amis tells us …   A dictionary of epithets and terms of address

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