|
Definition of Pizzle
1. n. The penis; -- so called in some animals, as the bull.
Definition of Pizzle
1. Noun. The penis of an animal. ¹
2. Noun. A baton made from the penis of an ox, once used to beat men and animals. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Pizzle
1. the penis of an animal [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Pizzle
Literary usage of Pizzle
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Practical Dictionary of the English and German Languages by Felix Flügel, Johann Gottfried Flügel (1861)
"m. 1. brush, pencil; l.fig. simpleton; 3. Sport, a) genitals (screw) of a wild
boar; b) pizzle of a roebuck; c) pizzle of a whale; II. сотр. ..."
2. God and Nothing by William Wallace Handlin (1903)
"They are now referred to Roosevelt, as well as my present charity "nigger case"
and "bull's pizzle. ..."
3. A Glossary of Obscure Words and Phrases in the Writings of Shakspeare and by Charles Mackay (1887)
"Land-damn is not a corruption of landan, but landau is a corruption of the older
word, of which the roots are the Gaelic, lann, the penis, or pizzle of an ..."
4. The Gaelic Etymology of the Languages of Western Europe and More Especially by Charles Mackay (1877)
"pizzle occurs in Bailey's Dictionary, 1731 :— pizzle, a scourge, because bull's
... Thus land-damn, or lann-damh, means to scourge with a bull's pizzle, ..."
5. Publications by English Dialect Society (1894)
"Ainsworth, Thesaurus, has ' A bull's pizzle, nervus taurinus.' Placket, Placket-hole,
sb. The slit in a gown or petticoat which enables the wearer to put ..."
6. A Practical Dictionary of the English and German Languages by Felix Flügel, Johann Gottfried Flügel (1861)
"m. 1. brush, pencil; l.fig. simpleton; 3. Sport, a) genitals (screw) of a wild
boar; b) pizzle of a roebuck; c) pizzle of a whale; II. сотр. ..."
7. God and Nothing by William Wallace Handlin (1903)
"They are now referred to Roosevelt, as well as my present charity "nigger case"
and "bull's pizzle. ..."
8. A Glossary of Obscure Words and Phrases in the Writings of Shakspeare and by Charles Mackay (1887)
"Land-damn is not a corruption of landan, but landau is a corruption of the older
word, of which the roots are the Gaelic, lann, the penis, or pizzle of an ..."
9. The Gaelic Etymology of the Languages of Western Europe and More Especially by Charles Mackay (1877)
"pizzle occurs in Bailey's Dictionary, 1731 :— pizzle, a scourge, because bull's
... Thus land-damn, or lann-damh, means to scourge with a bull's pizzle, ..."
10. Publications by English Dialect Society (1894)
"Ainsworth, Thesaurus, has ' A bull's pizzle, nervus taurinus.' Placket, Placket-hole,
sb. The slit in a gown or petticoat which enables the wearer to put ..."