Talk:roundheels

Latest comment: 6 years ago by Equinox in topic Possible etymology

see these links for references to Roundheels. It's a word used in popular fiction and as a political adj as well.

http://www.sex-lexis.com/Sex-Dictionary/roundheels http://www.ellroy.com/glossary.htm http://www.miskatonic.org/slang.html

Roundheels word in use: http://www.televisionwithoutpity.com/story.cgi?show=15&story=7167&limit=&sort= http://www.aei.org/publications/pubID.19442,filter.all/pub_detail.asp http://www.villagevoice.com/news/9806,stasi,493,4.html

RFV result edit

 

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Noun edit

  1. A boxer who knocks out easily.

RFV discussion: roundheels edit

Moved from rfd. Eclecticology 08:15, 21 October 2005 (UTC)Reply

I cleaned this one up, just in case. I get Google hits for it, but not many that look like evidence. What do you say? --Dvortygirl 03:20, 17 August 2005 (UTC)Reply

  • here's some link that it's a real word:

see these links for references to Roundheels. It's a word used in popular fiction and as a political adj as well.

Roundheels word in use:

Steve-O 12:56, 21 October 2005 (UTC)Reply


  • Here's another usage, describing a character in It's A Wonderful Life: "As Violet, one of the people whose lives would have been disastrously different had James Stewart's George Bailey never lived, 22-year-old Grahame gives us, in seven snapshot-like scenes covering 17 years, the evolution of a flirt into a full-scale roundheels."

There are also many links to the word being used as a boxing term on Google. I'm surprised that on line dictionarys don't have the word.


Added cites for the woman-of-low-repute sense (including one in Terry Pratchett, as a name) didn't see any in GP for the boxing sense. —Muke Tever 06:11, 28 October 2005 (UTC)Reply


Possible etymology edit

Straight From The Fridge, Dad by Max Décharné (a book of 1950s hipster slang) suggests that the round heels would make it easy to fall over backwards (i.e. onto a bed for sex): this also makes sense for the easily-knocked-out boxer. Equinox 06:10, 22 March 2018 (UTC)Reply

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