bitch slap
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See also: bitchslap and bitch-slap
English
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Audio (General Australian): (file)
Noun
[edit]bitch slap (plural bitch slaps)
- (slang, vulgar) An open-handed slap to the face.
- 2000, Valerie Frankel, Smart Vs. Pretty, HarperCollins, →ISBN, pages 3–4:
- Amanda’s remedy refrain, “just go out and meet someone new,” struck Frank like a bitch slap, even though she knew her sister meant no harm.
- 2003, Joel Perry, That’s Why They’re in Cages, People!, Alyson Publishing, →ISBN, page 38:
- The Lie: “I was only out drinking with my best friend, Betty.” / Translation: “I bought my best friend, Betty, drinks while I was on my needs in the back room.” […] / Response: Your patented bitch slap. After all, how fucking stupid does he think you are?
- 2006, Will Clarke, The Worthy: A Ghost’s Story, Simon and Schuster, →ISBN, page 132:
- Top this all off with an occasional bitch slap or ass-chewing and you’ve got yourself a real recipe for breaking even the strongest spirit.
- 2000, Valerie Frankel, Smart Vs. Pretty, HarperCollins, →ISBN, pages 3–4:
Usage notes
[edit]- The term has different connotations for different speakers; it is often used to refer to an especially strong or completely unexpected slap, but some speakers consider bitch slap to refer only to a weak slap (expressing mild contempt, as though the person being slapped is too weak to be given a strong slap). This would distinguish it from the stronger pimp slap.
- Due to the inclusion of the word bitch, this term is often considered misogynistic.
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]Translations
Verb
[edit]bitch slap (third-person singular simple present bitch slaps, present participle bitch slapping, simple past and past participle bitch slapped)
- Alternative spelling of bitch-slap
- 1997, Janet Evanovich, Three to Get Deadly, Scribner, →ISBN, page 16:
- “Maybe next time we just open the door and start out with some bitch slapping.” ¶ I gave Lula a horrified stare. ¶ “Just a suggestion,” Lula said.
- 2002, Richard D. Ward, Metamorphosis in Blue, Trafford Publishing, →ISBN, page 50:
- Van had to resist the urge to bitch slap him, and said instead, “I know you are, but what about me?”
- 2007, Tom Santopietro, Considering Doris Day, St. Martin's Press, →ISBN, page 72:
- Things are a little better when Doris ends up spending her “honeymoon” night in the tub with the sprinklers going off, and there is a genuinely amusing catfight between Ethel and Marcia in which Doris actually—there’s no other phrase for it—bitch slaps Marcia; it’s funny because Marcia is a loser, a whiny, imperious daddy’s girl, and worth neither Ethel’s time nor Winthrop’s attention.
- 1997, Janet Evanovich, Three to Get Deadly, Scribner, →ISBN, page 16: