Plus, this was clearly a double
entendre used in a somewhat casual environment... so how is this even news?
Not exact matches
«It's not the size that matters, it's how you
use it,» said Zillow Chief Economist Stan Humphries, who is taking the stage at Austin's South by Southwest (SXSW) to explain how this double
entendre applies to big data.
The double
entendre, which is another way of describing juxtaposed metaphor
used in relation to individual words and phrases, is an important and highly complex feature of Jesus Christ Superstar and another way, I believe, in which the parabolic mode is followed.
Language: The script contains numerous terms of Deity, some mild profanities and a crude term
used as a double
entendre for male anatomy.
By the time Donen made The Grass is Greener, he perfected the
use of clever set pieces, split screens, and double
entendres to work around the restrictions imposed by the censors.
The dialogue's got some famous double
entendres, and Fuller
uses the «Scope frame well, with wide Western vistas and some tense showdowns.
2 game sets are included
using the following verbs: vendre, attendre, répondre, descendre,
entendre, fondre, mordre, perdre, rendre, revendre, défendre, détendre, tendre, étendre.
The Australian diva's enjoyable tongue - in - cheek evening
uses blow - up dolls and double
entendres to deliciously subvert the fairytale of enduring love
The term gravity is
used as a double
entendre.
The title of the work serves as a double
entendre of sorts — a headshot refers to the close - up portraits
used by actors in the casting process, but here suggestively implies the unseen act of ejaculation.
In this context, windows is a double
entendre, referring both to the long - standing metaphor for the picture plane in Western art and to the more recent
use of overlapping frames to organize information on computer screens, challenging the window's association with a single - point perspective.