Meaning of donkey punching | Babel Free
Definitions
present participle and gerund of donkey punch
form-of, gerund, participle, present
Examples
“MOOJ: It's not about these rusty trombone, and dirty sanchez. It's not about rainbow showers and camel-toe slide, and your Cincinnati bowtie, your Arabian goggles or the hot carl and pearl necklace, or pussy juice cocktails, and the jagged-head dildos, and the double-decker pussies. / ANDY: (scared) OK. I, y'know, double pussies and-- / MOOJ: Shit stained balls, and cum swapping, and the hanging brain, it's not about the rattlesnake wiggle, and the alligator fuck house, donkey-punching, the tea-bagging-- / ANDY: Mooj, just please stop.”
“Put succinctly, the question is this: How does a generation with absolute knowledge of felching, donkey punching, and the dirty sanchez maintain healthy sex lives?”
“In real life Ken would have kicked his sister's ass any day. I think in the realm of dolls he would have been satisfied with just donkey punching her.”
“The release of the new film Donkey Punch, a saga about English holidaymakers on a Mediterranean holiday who get involved in a life or death struggle aboard a yacht, will probably not trouble either Bafta or the Academy Awards committee unduly. It is culturally notable, however, for its title. It is, in fact, a rather rude title, is Donkey Punch. Put it this way, no donkey comes to any physical harm in the act of donkey punching, though, arguably, an ass might well. Kids, be warned.”
“He told tales of gangs of young British men hired as crew then left to run riot on luxury yachts and also of a stag do he'd attended where competitive tales of sexual excess culminated in one man bragging about donkey-punching a girl a sadistic act performed by a man to heighten his own pleasures.”
“My boyfriend loves Donkey Punching me in the back of the head, but it's so demeaning for me not to make love face to face. It makes me feel like a piece of meat. So instead we started Strawberry Shortcaking.”
CEFR level
B2
Upper Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.
This word is part of the CEFR B2 vocabulary — upper intermediate level.