boom-boom
verbEtymology
Onomatopoeic. See boom.
Definitions
To make a loud, low-pitched sound.
- Overhead the woodpecker knocked insistently, and in the forest depths the partridge boom-boomed and strutted in virile glory.
To strike or beat.
- Archer lowers the boom on Tolaris about assaulting T’Pol and Tolaris boom booms him into the wall.
To have sexual intercourse.
- We're smart, sexy, and have even more sexable holes in our bodies than before the apocalypse. I would let a man boom-boom the hole in my calf...
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Loud, resonant sound
Loud, resonant sound; a repeated loud sound.
- ...it detested the thunderous boom-boom of the big drum, and the whoopings and hollerings that frightened the horses...
A strike
A strike; an act of beating.
- ...others spontaneously beat or shot helpless inmates [...] an SS-Blochführer was assisted by his girlfriend, who chortled, "Bubi, you have already made boom-boom so often, now let girly make boom-boom for once."
Excrement.
- Whatever the case, he was quite close to making boom-boom in his pants.
Sexual intercourse.
- Thuy pressed her body against him. "You want boom-boom?" she said.
Resonant
Resonant; producing a booming sound.
- The boom-boom bass out in the truck bay wasn't quite loud enough to drown out the whoops and the hollers of the ladies.
Used to draw attention to a pun or weak joke.
- "If he thinks that, he should live in a loony bin." "He already does." "Ha ha ha ha ha ha boom-boom!"
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for boom-boom. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA