Dictionaries:

bottom:

1. The buttocks , the ass or the anus , based on their location at the bottom of the body torso. The OED coyly defines bottom as: ' the sitting part of a man '. See ass and anus for synonyms.

Quote: In The Penthouse Sexicon (1968) Frederic Mullally defined:
-- BOSOM: ' Attractive anatomical protuberance peculiar to the female anatomy .'
-- BOTTOM: ' Anatomical protuberance attractive to the peculiar male .'

2. Or: front-bottom , the female genitals . See vagina for synonyms.

3. One of many terms used in polarity relationships and activities to indicate the receptive, passive or submissive partner as opposed to the top , active or dominant partner .
Synonyms: masochist; right-hip-pocket (see hanky code); slave ; sub (or: malesub, femalesub); submissive.
See also: dom ; dominant , sadist, top .

Quote: Bruce Rodgers. The Queens' Vernacular (1972): ' At bottoms, he's top .'

4. The passive or receptive partner in gay sexual activities such as anal-intercourse (for gay men) or vaginal intercourse with a dildo (for lesbians). See sodomite for synonyms.

Quote: Two gay males, Terry and Warren (Anthony Barrile), in Kiss me Guido (1998):
-- Terry: 'Me, I'm versatile . I like to be a top or a bottom.'
-- Warren: 'Oh, please, Terry. You have bottom stamped on your forehead .'

5. The person occupying the bottom position in sexual activities.

6. A synonym for passivity.


See Also: ampersand, anal insert, anal play, anal plug, anal sexual play, anal toy, Apostle's pinch, ass plug, asshole bandit, b-boy, B-girl string, backswing, bar, birdcage cleaner, blindfold, blue handkerchief, BOLTOP, bottom, bottom's up, bottom-sucker, bottomite, botty burp, boundaries, BT, burning, butch in the streets, butt plug, captor and captive, catcher, cherchez la femme, coital position, coital posture, corral, cul-de-sac, docile, Douglas cul-de-sac, family, fanny, fundament, funniment, gestation, get a wet bottorn, hit the sheets, hood bondage, in the game, in the life, in-law, intercourse position, kitchen cleaner, kitchen queen, knee spreader, leg spreader, leg stretcher, lovemaking position, main, main bitch, main lady, main piece, mottob, old lady, paper kiss(es), piles, pimp's corral, pouch of Douglas, power exchange, rectouterine excavation, rectouterine pouch, rimmer, Rimsky, sex position, sexual position, sister-in-law, soup-sipper, spreader bar, star of the line, succubus, sunnyside up, switch, switch-hitter, T & B, topping from the bottom, tops and bottoms, tuna tins, two-way artist, VICSS, violet wand, wet bottom, wife-in-law

Quotes Containing bottom:
Two gay males, Terry and Warren (Anthony Barrile) in Kiss me Guido (1998): - Terry: ''Me, I''m versatile . I like to be a top or a bottom .'' - Warren: ''Oh, please, Terry. You have bottom stamped on your forehead.''
Two gay males, Terry (Craig Chester) and Warren (Anthony Barrile), in Kiss me Guido (1998): - Terry: ''Me, I''m versatile . I like to be a top or a bottom .'' - Warren: ''Oh, please, Terry. You have bottom stamped on your forehead.''
Two gay males, Terry (Craig Chester) and Warren (Anthony Barrile), in Kiss me Guido (1998): - Terry: 'Me, I'm versatile . I like to be a top or a bottom .' - Warren: 'Oh, please, Terry. You have bottom stamped on your forehead.'
Sidney Melbourne (Bob Hope) in The Lemon Drop Kid (1951): ''You still have your hourglass figure , my dear, but most of the sand has gone to the bottom .''
Sidney Melbourne (Bob Hope) in The Lemon Drop Kid (1951): ?You still have your hourglass figure , my dear, but most of the sand has gone to the bottom .'
Junior (Bob Hope) in Son of Paleface (1952): ''I like to kiss this girl because she has just the type of lips I like, one on top and one on the bottom .''
Sidney Melbourne (Bob Hope) in The Lemon Drop Kid (1951): ''You still have your hourglass figure , my dear, but most of the sand has gone to the bottom .''
Caroline (Andie MacDowell) and Charles (Hugh Grant) in Four Weddings and a Funeral (1993): - Carrie: ''Why do you think it''s called honeymoon?'' - Charles: ''Hmmm, I don''t know . I-suppose it''s honey because it''s sweet as honey and moon because it''s the first time a husband got to see his wife''s bottom .''
Lou Peckingpaugh (Peter Falk) and Marlene Duchard (Louise Fletcher) in a Casablanca-like scene in The Cheap Detective (1978): - Lou: ''I almost forgot what you look like. Day by day I erased your face from my mind, little by little, till all I had left was your right ear and three front teeth on the bottom .'' - Marlene: ''I still carry your picture in a locket. Naturally I had to cut off your head in case Paul found it .''
In The Penthouse Sexicon (1968) Frederic Mullally defined: - BOSOM: ''Attractive anatomical protuberance peculiar to the female anatomy.'' - BOTTOM: ''Anatomical protuberance attractive to the peculiar male.''
In The Penthouse Sexicon (1968) Frederic Mullally defined: - BOSOM: ''Attractive anatomical protuberance peculiar to the female anatomy.'' - BOTTOM: ''Anatomical protuberance attractive to the peculiar male.''
Private eye Harper (Paul Newman) to Albert Graves (Arthur Hill) in Harper (1966): ''The bottom is loaded with nice people, Albert. Only cream and bastards rise.''
A short poem by Lou Perelli (Alan Arkin) and Ruben Martinez (Andy Garcia) for Judge W. Myers (David Ogden Stiers) in Steal Big, Steal Little (1995): ''May bleeding piles torment you and corns adorn your feet / And crabs as big as horse flies dig into your balls and eat / And when you''re old and weary and a siphilitic wreck / May you fall through your own bottom and break your bloody neck .''
Thief and con man William Shaw (Matthew Modine) dancing with a richly bejewelled lady in Cutthroat Island (1995) - Shaw: 'I'm a medical man , a doctor.' - Lady: 'Oh, my! (...) With higher anatomy you must know a great deal about the human body.' - Shaw: 'Indeed, madam . Every bit of it . All the ins and outs. In medecine it is our obligation to probe to the very bottom of things. '
Gittel (Shirley MacLaine) and Gerry (Robert Mitchum) in Two for the Seesaw (1962): - Gittel: 'Do you think I'm too fat?' - Gerry: 'Good heavens, no .' - Gittel: 'Do you think I'm too skinny?' - Gerry: 'I think you're a sacred vessel of womanhood .' - Gittel: 'Sexy as all get up , hmm?' - Gerry: 'Well put. - Gittel: 'Do you think I'm too sexy? I mean oversexed?' - Gerry: 'Well, I think your kind of a mixed up vessel. Calmly considered I'd say your bottom was tops. ' - Gittel: 'Oh, some vessel! I sound like a shipwreck.'


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