Anonymous ID: 500349 Oct. 27, 2023, 7:24 p.m. No.19814685   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>4857

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cornยทhole

/หˆkรดrnหŒhลl/

US

noun

noun: cornhole; plural noun: cornholes; noun: corn-hole; noun: corn-holes

1.

a game in which small bags filled with dried corn are tossed at a target consisting of an inclined wooden platform with a hole at one end.

"many are introduced to cornhole at a tailgate or family outing"

2.

VULGAR SLANG

View definition

verbVULGAR SLANG

verb: cornhole; 3rd person present: cornholes; past tense: cornholed; past participle: cornholed; gerund or present participle: cornholing; verb: corn-hole; 3rd person present: corn-holes; past tense: corn-holed; past participle: corn-holed; gerund or present participle: corn-holing

have anal intercourse with (someone).

 

Cornhole (slang)

 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For other uses, see Cornhole (disambiguation).

Cornhole (sometimes corn hole) is a sexual slang vulgarism for the anus.[1] The term came into use in the 1910s in the United States.[2] Its verb form, to cornhole, which came into use in the 1930s, means 'to have anal sex'.[2][3]

 

Connotations and variants

The term is apparently derived "from the practice in the days of the outhouse of using dried corn cobs for toilet paper."[4][5]

 

By the middle of the 20th century, the term was used among American criminals.[6] According to a 1944 report on male-male prison rape, the term had taken on a more specific meaning of taking the penetrative role in anal sex.[7] It was also popularized in part through use in gay culture.[8][9]

 

In a similar context, a corn husk is a "condom", especially one manufactured for anal intercourse.[10]

 

According to linguist Jonathan Lighter, to cornhole and variant non-derived synonyms have developed as compound verbs: to corncob [1975] and to corndog [1985].[11] Linguists have noted the verb form as an example of possible compound verbs in English. There is debate whether such words are genuine compounds or pseudo-compounds.[12]

 

Cornholio, the alter ego of Beavis from Beavis and Butt-head, is a play on the word cornhole, as his catch phrase is โ€œI am the Great Cornholio! I need TP for my bunghole!"[13][14] The personality of Cornholio, in turn, became inspiration for the cocktail called the "Flaming Cornholio".[15]

 

Comedian George Carlin performed a short skit about the word cornhole in his 2005 show "Life Is Worth Losing", praising it for being tough-sounding and thus more honest than politically correct terms like anal intercourse or anal rape. He elaborated on the word repeatedly in earlier shows, including a famous rant about the euphemism treadmill which caused the term shell shock to evolve into post-traumatic stress disorder. He then imagined its use in a forensic investigation scene of a police procedurals television series ("That there is a posthumous, multiple cornhole entry wound") and pointed out that "in prison it's a social activity".[16]

 

See also

 

Look up Cornhole in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

Asshole

Bunghole