keister
See also: Keister
English
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editUncertain. Originally attested as a criminal cant word for "burglar's tool-box" in 1881. In the 20th century a clutch of criminal slang meanings are mentioned, including "safe, strongbox". "Tripe and keister" had been the phrase for a conman's or a pitchman's display case on a tripod. A likely origin is the word Kiste, which means a box or case, in both German and Yiddish.
Pronunciation
editAudio (General Australian): (file) - Rhymes: -iːstə(ɹ)
Noun
editkeister (plural keisters)
- (slang) The anus or buttocks.
- Synonyms: see Thesaurus:anus, Thesaurus:buttocks
- (slang, dated) A safe, a strongbox.
- 1953, Richard S. Prather, Too many crooks, page 100:
- ― " […] The four hundred's yours to take a keister for me. Any cash you find in the box is yours."
― "Four hundred, huh? Don't seem like much. Think there'd be anything in the keister?"
- (slang) A suitcase or satchel.
- 1942 August 29, Billboard, page 63:
- Tripods, keister and loud talk don't make a pitchman any more than do fine feathers make fine birds.
- 1963, Grace Snyder, Nellie Irene Snyder Yost, No Time on My Hands, page 37:
- Sometimes Mama was too busy to make the daily rounds of the draws and pockets, in which case she gave us the keister — an old leather satchel used, in its better days to carry the baby's "didies" in — and sent us to bring in the eggs.
Derived terms
editTranslations
editVerb
editkeister (third-person singular simple present keisters, present participle keistering, simple past and past participle keistered)