ride rantipole
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Verb
[edit]ride rantipole (third-person singular simple present rides rantipole, present participle riding rantipole, simple past rode rantipole, past participle ridden rantipole)
- (intransitive, vulgar, archaic) To have sexual intercourse with the woman positioned on top of the man.
- Synonyms: cowgirl, ride St. George
- 1772, Samuel Bentley, “Prize Ænigma”, in The Ladies' Diary: or Woman's Almanack, volume 69, page 31:
- Oft in the Streets I'm ſeen to ride / Exalted, as it were for Pride; / And ſome will have it that I ſtroll, / Like Boys, when riding Rantipole[.]
- 2021, Emma Lombard, chapter 3, in Grace on the Horizon (The White Sails; 2):
- How 'bout I let ya climb aboard me, love? I'll even let ya ride rantipole," slurred the stranger, waggling his bushy eyebrows.
- [2021, Lucasta Miller, Keats: A Brief Life in Nine Poems and One Epitaph:
- As a verb, 'to ride rantipole' meant 'the woman uppermost in amorous congress', which adds an extra layer of humour to the poem, as Keats's Rantipole Betty is flat on her back, 'dead as a venus tipsy'.]
References
[edit]- “rantipole n.”, in Green’s Dictionary of Slang, Jonathon Green, 2016–present