Dictionaries:

bad:

1. A word used to judge character and behavior.

Quotes:

(1) Sally Morgan (Eleanor Hunt) and Henry Williams (Eddie Cantor) in Whoopee (1930):
-- Sally : ' When is a good girl not a good girl? '
-- HenryL ' Nine times out of ten .'

(2) Tira (Mae West) in I'm No Angel (1933): ' When I'm good, I'm very good. When I'm bad, I'm even better .'

(3) Lady Lou (Mae West) in She Done Him Wrong (1933): ' When women go wrong, men go right after them .'

(4) Ruby Carter (Mae West) in Belle of the Nineties (1934): ' There are no girls gone wrong, there are bad-girls found out .'

(5) The judge deporting Bijou Blanche (Marlene Dietrich) in Seven Sinners (1940):
-- Judge: ' You're accused of. ..'
-- Bijou: ' Of inciting and exciting a riot, of being a public nuisance. I make rough seas. I set the jungle on fire. I'm a baaaaad influence .'

(6) Alicia (Ingrid Bergman) to Devlin (Cary Grant) in Notorious (1946): 'Poor Dev, in-love-with a no-good girl .'

(7) Ed Forbes (Jack Paar) to Roberta Stevens (Marilyn Monroe) who admits having a weakness for champagne in Love Nest (1951): ' If there's one thing I have a weakness for it's girls who have a weakness .'

(8) David Slater (David Niven) in The Moon is Blue (1953): ' I wonder why it is that young men are always cautioned against bad girls? Anyone can handle a bad-girl ; it's the good girls men ought to be warned against .'

(9) Eliza Doolittle (Audrey Hepburn) in My Fair Lady (1964): ' I'm a good girl , I am .'

(10) Queen Doris (Susan Tyrrell) in Forbidden Zone (1980): ' Why does it feel so good to be sooooo bad? '

(11) Jack (Robert Downey, Jr.) and Randy (Molly Ringwald) in The Pick-Up Artist (1987):
-- Jack: ' Did anyone ever tell you you're too good to be true? '-- Randy: ' Not only that but I'm too beautiful to be good .'

(12) Sung by Johnny Depp as Cry-Baby (1990): ' We love being bad because if feels so good .'

(13) Miss Sharon Stone (Halle Berry) to Fred Flintstone (John Goodman) in The Flintstones (1994): ' I've been a very bad-girl , but you have to admit I was very, very good at-it .'

(14) King Arthur (Sean Connery) in First Knight (1995): ' I take the good with the bad. I can't love people in pieces .'

(15) In Kiss of Death (1995):-- Little Junior Brown: 'I got an acronym for myself. B-A-D. B-A-D. Balls, attitude, determination. You should get an acronym for yourself .'-- Jimmy Kilmartin: ' How about F-A-B . Fucked at birth .'-- Little Junior Brown: ' Nah. Too negative .'

(16) Henny Youngman: ' A good girl is good but a bad-girl is better .'

2. BAD, dialectical slang for Boy-in-A-Dress, an inexperienced young male who is learning the art of female dress and the application and use of cosmetics.

3. Or: bad-to-the-bone , good; extraordinary; great; awesome.


See Also: apples, autodysomophobia, back teeth are afloat, back teeth are floating, bad, bad blood, bad disease, bad girl, bad thing, bad week, bad woman, bad-ass, bad-ass mf, balls in a sling, bitch, bitch kitty, blood disease, boy, burn bad powder, cacoethes, callicacia, cantankerous, cheap, cometosis, Corinthian, cunnilinguist, cunning linguist, deprave, depraved, dick breath, ding-a-ling, dissipated, do the bad thing, doesn't know his ass from a hole in the groud, doesn't know shit from shinola, donkey kisser, fuck off, Fuck you!, go tiki, good foot, good woman, Hairy back, bad in the sack, halitosis, heel, hop on, hymenally challenged, knob cheese, leg, piece, rock and roll, scelerophobia, shitty, sorry and sad, tacky drag, thing-a-ling, titty, tough shit!, tough titties!, VBD, vulgar, whorehouse, wicket

Quotes Containing bad:
George Orwell (1903-1950) Animal Farm (1945): ''Four legs good, two legs bad .''
George Orwell (1903-1950) Animal Farm (1945): ''Four legs good, two legs bad .''
George Orwell (1903-1950) Animal Farm (1945): ''Four legs good, two legs bad .''
David Slater (David Niven) in The Moon is Blue (1953): ''I wonder why it is that young men are always cautioned against bad girls? Anyone can handle a bad-girl ; it''s the good girls men ought to be warned against.''
David Slater (David Niven) in The Moon is Blue (1953): ''I wonder why it is that young men are always cautioned against bad girls? Anyone can handle a bad-girl ; it''s the good girls men ought to be warned against.''
David Slater (David Niven) in The Moon is Blue (1953): ''I wonder why it is that young men are always cautioned against bad girls? Anyone can handle a bad-girl ; it''s the good girls men ought to be warned against.''
David Slater (David Niven) in The Moon is Blue (1953): ''I wonder why it is that young men are always cautioned against bad girls? Anyone can handle a bad-girl ; it''s the good girls men ought to be warned against.''
Queen Doris (Susan Tyrrell) in Forbidden Zone (1980): ''Why does it feel so good to be sooooo bad?''
Ruby Carter (Mae West) in Belle of the Nineties (1934): ''There are no girls gone wrong, there are bad-girls found out .''
King Arthur (Sean Connery) in First Knight (1995): ''I take the good with the bad . I can''t love people in pieces. ''
Sung by Johnny Depp as Cry-Baby (1990): ''We love being bad because it feels so good.''
King Arthur (Sean Connery) in First Knight (1995): ''I take the good with the bad . I can''t love people in pieces. ''
Ruby Carter (Mae West) in Belle of the Nineties (1934): ''There are no girls gone wrong, there are bad-girls found out .''
Sung by Johnny Depp as Cry-Baby (1990): ''We love being bad because it feels so good.''
Queen Doris (Susan Tyrrell) in Forbidden Zone (1980): ''Why does it feel so good to be sooooo bad?''
Sung by Johnny Depp as Cry-Baby (1990): ''We love being bad because it feels so good.''
Sung by Johnny Depp as Cry-Baby (1990): ''We love being bad because it feels so good.''
King Arthur (Sean Connery) in First Knight (1995): ''I take the good with the bad . I can''t love people in pieces. ''
Queen Doris (Susan Tyrrell) in Forbidden Zone (1980): ''Why does it feel so good to be sooooo bad?''
Ruby Carter (Mae West) in Belle of the Nineties (1934): ''There are no girls gone wrong, there are bad-girls found out .''
Ruby Carter (Mae West) in Belle of the Nineties (1934): ''There are no girls gone wrong, there are bad-girls found out .''
Queen Doris (Susan Tyrrell) in Forbidden Zone (1980): ''Why does it feel so good to be sooooo bad?''
King Arthur (Sean Connery) in First Knight (1995): ''I take the good with the bad . I can''t love people in pieces. ''
Batgirl (Alicia Silverstone) to Poison Ivy (Uma Thurman) in Batman-and-Robin (1997): ''Chicks like you give women a bad name.''
Marcus Burnett (Martin Lawrence) to July (Tea Leoni) in Bad Boys (1995): ''You don''t want that because when I come I come like the thunder.''
Rudy Adams (Jean Harlow) to Gypsy (Dorothy Burgess) in Hold Your Man (1933): ''You know , you wouldn''t be a bad looking dame ... if it wasn''t for your face .''
Jonathan Fields (Kirk Douglas) in The Bad and the Beautiful (1952): ''He wasn''t a heel , he was the heel .''
Rudy Adams (Jean Harlow) to Gypsy (Dorothy Burgess) in Hold Your Man (1933): ''You know , you wouldn''t be a bad looking dame ... if it wasn''t for your face .''
Jack Noah (Richard Dreyfuss), as dictator Alphonso Simms, to Madonna Mendez (Sonia Braga) in Moon Over Parador (1988): ''I want to kiss you so bad I could spit .''
Uncle Pio (Steven Geray) to Gilda (Rita Hayworth) in Gilda (1946): ''All bad-things end up lonely, little one.''
Marcus Burnett (Martin Lawrence) to July (Tea Leoni) in Bad Boys (1995): ''You don''t want that because when I come I come like the thunder.''
Keogh (Michael Caine) threatening to shoot a bad guy''s balls off in The Wilby Conspiracy (1974): ''Do you want to make your next statement in soprano?''
James Brannigan (John Wayne) pointing a gun at the bad guy in Brannigan (1975):''I wouldn''t, unless you want to sing soprano.''
Chauncey M . Depey (1834-1928): ''A pessimist is a man who thinks all women are bad ; an optimist is one who hopes they are.''
Chauncey M . Depey (1834-1928): ''A pessimist is a man who thinks all women are bad ; an optimist is one who hopes they are.''
Chauncey M . Depey (1834-1928): ''A pessimist is a man who thinks all women are bad ; an optimist is one who hopes they are.''
Rudy Adams (Jean Harlow) to Gypsy (Dorothy Burgess) in Hold Your Man (1933): ''You know , you wouldn''t be a bad looking dame ... if it wasn''t for your face .''
Rudy Adams (Jean Harlow) to Gypsy (Dorothy Burgess) in Hold Your Man (1933): ''You know , you wouldn''t be a bad looking dame ... if it wasn''t for your face .''
Carrie Davenport (Courtenay Cox) and David Crown (Arye Gross) meeting in a basement bar where clients use a periscope to view passing women''s legs in The Opposite Sex. And How to Live With Them (1993): - Carrie: ''It''s not polite to spy.'' - David: ''I wasn''t spying. I was leering. '' - Carrie: ''You know , this thing reinforces bad viewing habits. You should learn to look at a woman as a whole .'' - David: ''Hey, listen, I''m way to enlightened to look at a woman like that.'' - Carrie: ''I meant as opposed to just half.'' - David: ''It''s a periscope in a bar . Lighten up!'' - Carrie: ''You just shouldn''t look at women as objects.'' - David: ''Oh, now, you see , I was looking at women objectively.'' - Carrie: ''You know , I don''t care for semantics.'' - David: ''Oh, too bad , I''m Jewish. May I buy you a drink?'' - Carrie: ''I don''t think so.'' - David: ''The whole you?''
Carrie Davenport (Courtenay Cox) and David Crown (Arye Gross) meeting in a basement bar where clients use a periscope to view passing women''s legs in The Opposite Sex. And How to Live With Them (1993): - Carrie: ''It''s not polite to spy.'' - David: ''I wasn''t spying. I was leering. '' - Carrie: ''You know , this thing reinforces bad viewing habits. You should learn to look at a woman as a whole .'' - David: ''Hey, listen, I''m way to enlightened to look at a woman like that.'' - Carrie: ''I meant as opposed to just half.'' - David: ''It''s a periscope in a bar . Lighten up!'' - Carrie: ''You just shouldn''t look at women as objects.'' - David: ''Oh, now, you see , I was looking at women objectively.'' - Carrie: ''You know , I don''t care for semantics.'' - David: ''Oh, too bad , I''m Jewish. May I buy you a drink?'' - Carrie: ''I don''t think so.'' - David: ''The whole you?''
Aurora Greenway (Shirley MacLaine) and Garrett Breedlove (Jack Nicholson) coming home after a very bad dinner date in Terms of Endearment (1983). - Aurora:'Would you like to come in?' - Garret:'I'd rather stick needles in my eyes .'
Una (Lauren Tom) about her superstitious China-born mother in The Joy Luck Club (1993):''So my mom sees this miror at the foot of our bed and she says: Aie-ya! A mirror is bad luck. All the romance will hit the mirror, pooom, go back the opposite direction.''
Fred Amiel (Barry Sullivan) speaking of Jonathan Shields (Kirk Douglas) in The Bad and the Beautiful (1952): ''Jonathan is more than a man , he''s an experience; and he''s habit-forming. If they could ever bottle him, he''d outsell ginger ale.''
Fred Amiel (Barry Sullivan) speaking of Jonathan Shields (Kirk Douglas) in The Bad and the Beautiful (1952): ''Jonathan is more than a man , he''s an experience; and he''s habit-forming. If they could ever bottle him, he''d outsell ginger ale.''
Money Penny to James Bond (Pierce Brosnan) in Tomorrow Never Dies (1998): ''You always were a cunning-linguist , James''. James is at that time ''brushing up on a Little Danish''. Britishers can''t resist a pun, good or bad .''
Chili Pepper (Woody Harrelson) to bouncer Chango/Stubby (Luis Guzman) in The Cowboy Way (1994): ''Speak English? Sabe English? Why that''s too bad because I was gonna tell you your face looks like a hat full of assholes. ''
Private eye V.I. Warshawski (Kathleen Turner) squints at the bad guys thumb and forefinger trying to figure out just how much space there is between them in V.I. Warshawski (1991): - Tough guy : ''Don''t push me, Warshawski, because you''re about this close.'' - Warshawski: ''What''s that? Your I.Q. or the size of your dick?''
Ellie Andrews (Claudette Colbert) and Peter Warne (Clark Gable) in It Happened One Night (1934): - Ellie: ''Your ego is absolutely colossal!'' - Peter: ''Not bad . How about yours?''
Tai (Brittany Murphy), Cher (Alicia Silverstone) and Dionne (Stacey Nash) in Clueless (1995): - Tai: ''Cher, you''re a virgin?'' - Char: ''God! You say that like it''s a bad-thing .'' - Dionne: ''Besides, the P .C. term is hymenally-challenged.''
Tai (Brittany Murphy), Cher (Alicia Silverstone) and Dionne (Stacey Nash) in Clueless (1995): - Tai: ''Cher, you''re a virgin?'' - Char: ''God! You say that like it''s a bad-thing .'' - Dionne: ''Besides, the P .C. term is hymenally-challenged.''
Paula (Lana Turner) and Jonny (Clark Gable) in Somewhere I''ll Find You (1942): - Paula Lane: ''Any gal that listens to the howl of a wolf is a gonner.'' - Jonny Davis: ''Little Riding Hood didn''t do so bad .'' - Paula Lane: ''She didn''t do so good either... ''til she got wise.''
Stella (Marilyn Sokol) to Gloria (Goldie Hawn) in Foul Play (1978): 'If they say "I like you" it's not so bad . It's when they say "I love you" that's when you gotta watch out .'
'You always were a cunning-linguist , James'. Money Penny to James Bond (Pierce Brosnan) in Tomorrow Never Dies (1998) James is at that time 'brushing up on a Little Danish' Britishers can't resist a pun, good or bad .
In Mafia (1997) about the local mafia boss: - 'I saw a man today, Rose, who sucks his own people dry.' - 'Hmmm, like those movies you make me watch.' - 'No, I mean in a bad way .'
Tai (Brittany Murphy), Cher (Alicia Silverstone) and Dionne (Stacey Nash) in Clueless (1995): - Tai: ''Cher, you''re a virgin?'' - Char: ''God! You say that like it''s a bad-thing .'' - Dionne: ''Besides, the P .C. term is hymenally-challenged.''
Sandy (Shandra Beri) and Roxanne Kowalski (Daryl Hannah) in Roxanne (1987): - Sandy: ''He''s got a great ass .'' - Roxanne: ''Too bad it''s on his shoulders.''
Dante Hicks (Brian O?Halloran) in Clerks (1994): ''Yeah, I mean aside from the cheating , we were a great couple . I mean that''s what high school was about, algebra, bad lunch , and infidelity .''
Austin Powers (Mike Myers) to Felicity Shagwell (Heather Graham) in Austin Powers 2 The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999): ''Come on , darling , let''s hop-on the good-foot and do-the-bad-thing .''
Miss Sharon Stone (Halle Berry) to Fred Flintstone (John Goodman) in The Flintstones (1994): ''I''ve been a very bad-girl , but you have to admit I was very, very good at-it .''
Tira (Mae West) in I''m No Angel (1933): ''When I''m good, I''m very good. When I''m bad , I''m even better.''
Austin Powers (Mike Myers) to Felicity Shagwell (Heather Graham) in Austin Powers2. The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999): ''Come on , darling , let''s hop-on the good-foot and do-the-bad-thing .''
Miss Sharon Stone (Halle Berry) to Fred Flintstone (John Goodman) in The Flintstones (1994): ''I''ve been a very bad-girl , but you have to admit I was very, very good at-it .''
Tira (Mae West) in I''m No Angel (1933): ''When I''m good, I''m very good. When I''m bad , I''m even better.''
Tira (Mae West) in I''m No Angel (1933): ''When I''m good, I''m very good. When I''m bad , I''m even better.''
Austin Powers (Mike Myers) to Felicity Shagwell (Heather Graham) in Austin Powers2. The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999): ''Come on , darling , let''s hop-on the good-foot and do-the-bad-thing .''
Miss Sharon Stone (Halle Berry) to Fred Flintstone (John Goodman) in The Flintstones (1994): ''I''ve been a very bad-girl , but you have to admit I was very, very good at-it .''
Miss Sharon Stone (Halle Berry) to Fred Flintstone (John Goodman) in The Flintstones (1994): ''I''ve been a very bad-girl , but you have to admit I was very, very good at-it .''
Austin Powers (Mike Myers) to Felicity Shagwell (Heather Graham) in Austin Powers2. The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999): ''Come on , darling , let''s hop-on the good-foot and do-the-bad-thing .''
Austin Powers (Mike Myers) to Felicity Shagwell (Heather Graham) in Austin Powers2. The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999): ''Come on , darling , let''s hop-on the good-foot and do-the-bad-thing .''
Tira (Mae West) in I''m No Angel (1933): ''When I''m good, I''m very good. When I''m bad , I''m even better.''
Rhett Butler (Clark Gable) to Scarlett O''Hara (Vivien Leigh) in Gone with the Wind (1939): ''I love you Scarlett. In spite of you and me and the whole silly world going to pieces around us. I love you because we''re alike, bad lots the both of us, selfish and shrewd, but able to look things in the eyes and call them by their right names. (...) Scarlett! Look at me. I''ve loved you more than I''ve ever loved any woman and I''ve waited longer for you than I''ve ever waited for any woman . (...) Here''s a soldier of the South who loves you, Scarlett, wants to feel your arms around him, wants to carry the memory of your kisses into battle with him. Never mind about loving me. You''re a woman sending a soldier to his death with a beautiful memory. Scarlett, kiss me, kiss me, once.''
Captain Rhett Butler (Clark Gable) to Scarlett O'Hara (Vivien Leigh) in Gone with the Wind (1939): 'I love you Scarlett. In spite of you and me and the whole silly world going to pieces around us. I love you because we're alike, bad lots the both of us, selfish and shrewd, but able to look things in the eyes and call them by their right names. Scarlett! Look at me. I've loved you more than I've ever loved any woman and I've waited longer for you than I've ever waited for any woman . Here's a soldier of the South who loves you, Scarlett, wants to feel your arms around him, wants to carry the memory of your kisses into battle with him. Never mind about loving me. You're a woman sending a soldier to his death with a beautiful memory. Scarlett, kiss me, kiss me, once.'
Charles Panati. Sexy Origins and Intimate Things (1998): ''Thanks to photography and film, Americans have created and worshiped more femme icons than all previous centuries combined. Each of our decades has produced several new images. For the most part, men dreamed up these images and named them, and women have worked hard to copy their shapes and costumes. If there is a single attribute that most of these modern images possess, its "sex-appeal " - a relatively new and daring term in English. American men have categorized their women by sexual types and nicknamed them with suggestively playful tags. In centuries past, where a virtue-vice dichotomy prevailed, women came in only two types: good or bad , whores or madonnas, mothers or mistresses. ''
Charles Panati. Sexy Origins and Intimate Things (1998): ''Thanks to photography and film, Americans have created and worshiped more femme icons than all previous centuries combined. Each of our decades has produced several new images. For the most part, men dreamed up these images and named them, and women have worked hard to copy their shapes and costumes. If there is a single attribute that most of these modern images possess, its "sex-appeal " - a relatively new and daring term in English. American men have categorized their women by sexual types and nicknamed them with suggestively playful tags. In centuries past, where a virtue-vice dichotomy prevailed, women came in only two types: good or bad , whores or madonnas, mothers or mistresses. ''
Charles Panati. Sexy Origins and Intimate Things (1998): ''Thanks to photography and film, Americans have created and worshiped more femme icons than all previous centuries combined. Each of our decades has produced several new images. For the most part, men dreamed up these images and named them, and women have worked hard to copy their shapes and costumes. If there is a single attribute that most of these modern images possess, its "sex-appeal " - a relatively new and daring term in English. American men have categorized their women by sexual types and nicknamed them with suggestively playful tags. In centuries past, where a virtue-vice dichotomy prevailed, women came in only two types: good or bad , whores or madonnas, mothers or mistresses. ''


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