Gay in slang
AIDS Terrorist - Someone who is HIV+ and who knowingly engages in unsafe sex.
B & D - Bondage and discipline. A milder form of S & M which involves one partner organism at least constrained.
Baby Dyke - A young or inexperienced lesbian, particularly of high school or college age.
Bareback - The apply of having anal sex without using a barrier method of a condom. As in skin-to-skin sex or raw sex.
Basket - A man's crotch.
Bear - An extremely hairy man.
Beef - Buffed men.
Blue - Gay, referring mostly to males.
Blue Balls - Term used to explain an extremely horney male.
Bog Queen - A lgbtq+ man who frequents universal toilets for sex.
Bottom - The passive or obedient partner in anal intercourse.
Breeders - A derogatory designation for heterosexuals, especially for those who glorify childbearing.
Brown Eye - A insulting term for the anus.
Bungie Boy - Straight-acting, but gay or bi-boy.
Bunker Bashful - A young dude who fears being forced into homosexual sex. Derivation from a 19th century prison term.
Butch - Masculine.
Chicken - Anyone who is under the legal age of consent. Young ga
LGBTQIA+ Slurs and Slang
bog queen
Synonyms: Bathsheba (composition between bathroom and Sheba to produce a name reminiscent of the Queen of Sheba), Ghost (50s, ghost, because they wander the corridors of the bathroom).
Part of the fun of researching 1920’s and 1930’s Queer subculture in New York City was coming across a wide variety of specialized slang and coded terms that flourished among queer men and women of the time. Some of these terms are solely of their second, some have survived into the modern era, albeit often with modified meanings.
Not surprisingly, for a social group that for the most part did not manner themselves openly in society, a lot of these terms constitute a kind of secret language available only to those “in the club”. They describe sexual preferences and types, as successfully as particular places and activities important to homosexuals of the time.
Folding these terms into the libretto of “Speakeasy – The Adventures of John and Jane Allison in the Wonderland” was a lot of fun. For the most part the essence of the words should be clear in context. However a little confusion can be joy too, as in this moment, when John Allison eavesdrops on a trio of Gay Florists and Julian Carnation:
FLORIST 1:
You can keep 42nd Street. Give me the Brooklyn Navy Yard.
FLORIST 2:
You and your seafood, Violet!
F Lesbians may have a longer linguistic history than gay men. Contrary to the incomplete information given in the OED, the word lesbian has meant “female homosexual” since at least the initial eighteenth century. William King in his satire The Toast (published 1732, revised 1736), referred to “Lesbians” as women who “loved Women in the matching Manner as Men love them”. During that century, references to “Sapphic lovers” and “Sapphist” meant a woman who liked “her retain sex in a criminal way”. For centuries before that, comparing a lady to Sappho of Lesbos implied passions that were more than poetic. Unfortunately we don’t grasp the origins of the most prevalent queerwords that became popular during the 1930s through 1950s gay, dyke, faggot, queer, fairy. Dyke, meaning butch lesbian, goes help to 1920s inky American slang: bull-diker or bull-dagger. It might go support to the 1850s phrase “all diked out” or “all decked out”, definition faultlessly dressed in this case, like a bloke or “bull”. The word faggot goes back to 1914, when “faggots” and “fairies” were said to attend “drag balls”. Nels Anderson in