Dictionaries:

Venus:

In Roman mythology, the goddess of love and beauty , identified with the Greek goddess Aphrodite . Venus was the mother of Cupid , the god-of-love . Venus and Cupid prefix many literary euphemisms for the vagina : Venus'-cell , - glove , - highway, - honeypot , - mark, - secret cell. Cupid's-alley , -anvil, - arms, - cave , - cloister, - corner , - cupboard; - furrow , - hotel.
See Also: Aphrodite, bumper-to-bumper, callipygian, clam jousting, clit fight, Cupid, curse of Venus, cyprianophobia, cypridophobia, cyprinophobia, cypriphobia, die for, doughnut to doughnut, flat fuck, geography, lesbian love, lesbian sex, masochism, sapphism, STD, to die for, vagina-to-vagina, venereal, venereal disease, venery, Venus, Venus flytrap, Venus' cell, Venus' curse, wasp waist

Quotes Containing Venus:
Nick Townsend (Cary Grant) to Helen Faraday (Marlene Dietrich) in Blonde Venus (1932): ''I little of you is worth a lifetime of any other woman .''
Nick Townsend (Cary Grant) to Helen Farady (Marlene Dietrich) in Blonde Venus (1932): ''My life isn''t complete without you.''
Nick Townsend (Cary Grant) to Helen Faraday (Marlene Dietrich) in Blonde Venus (1932): ''I little of you is worth a lifetime of any other woman .''
Nick Townsend (Cary Grant) to Helen Faraday (Marlene Dietrich) in Blonde Venus (1932): ''I little of you is worth a lifetime of any other woman .''
Nick Townsend (Cary Grant) to Helen Faraday (Marlene Dietrich) in Blonde Venus (1932): ''I little of you is worth a lifetime of any other woman .''
Professor Abraham Van Helsing (Anthony Hopkins) in Bram Stoker''s Dracula (1993): ''Blood and the diseases of the blood, such as syphilis , which concerns us here. The very name venereal-diseases, the diseases of Venus , imputes to them a divine origin.''


Link to this page:

Word Browser