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Oxford English Dictionary Def 20 b. Originally among African Americans. my man n. a male person regarded with great respect or admiration; a person's very close male friend. Frequently as a form of address (sometimes without connotation of close friendship, as a merely familiar form of address between two males.
English (US) Mans is sometimes used as slang to refer to a person. “Come and get your mans” and “Whose mans is this?” is used to call out someone who is killing the moment. “That’s my mans” means something like “That’s my friend/buddy”. If someone said “I have a mans” they probably mean they a boyfriend.
The answer is yes, it is OK to use that expression in your paper. It is not informal or slang. As Alan recommended in his comment 'in layperson's terms' is a good alternative if you want to make an effort to use gender-neutral terms. I personally think that layperson is a little awkward, but it can be important in some environments to choose ...
"Camel toe" is the name of the condition when the sexual organ of the women is projecting out from the pants. Then my question is what is the corresponding alsng or idiom for this condition in men,
The most common meaning is. bo. 1 (also [spelled] beau, boh) a fellow, a man, a friend, often as a form of address, e.g. Hey, bo. It gives usages ranging from 1825 to 1988, so according to Green, at least, the bo of today (found for example in the Urban Dictionary) is the same bo of almost 200 years ago.
Vulgar Slang To experience orgasm. And come "Also cum" has only one definition as a noun: n. also cum (kŭm) Vulgar Slang Semen ejaculated during orgasm. And the same dictionary lists cum only as a noun, labeling it a "variant of come", suggesting that "come" may be the more standard or common term: n. Vulgar Slang Variant of come.
Dick for Richard, Bob for Robert, Bill for William, and more. It originates from the 12–13th centuries (Middle English), in a time where a lot of people had the same names. Richard was also spelled Rickard, which obviously shortens to Rick (a nickname we still use today). From there, rhyming forms were created, getting us Dick.
For a modern slang term, and depending on the quality / desirability / rarity of the products, she could be described as basic. " Basic is a slang term in American popular culture used to pejoratively describe people who like popular, mainstream products or music."
Be careful using this outside the US. In the UK, it is not a common phrase, whereas 'to blow someone' is a sexual slang and much more common. The nearest equivalent is 'to blow someone out' which is a local slang for cancelling an arrangement. But please avoid in the UK. Especially when the object of the sentence is male. –
Dropping "g"s almost always makes language informal (i.e., slang). A common slang interpretation means (or alludes to) sex or drugs (or both). But not always. Putting "a little" in front of the expression makes it more likely it means sex or drugs. But not necessarily. It moves the expression slightly more toward the slang end of the spectrum.