English edit

Noun edit

arseclown (plural arseclowns)

  1. Alternative form of assclown
    • 2007, Lachlan Ross, On the Boundless Presumption of Conceited Humankind, Lulu.com, →ISBN, page 118:
      ‘Too tired for an arseclown pup to be questioning me.’
    • 2007, Mark Jones, The Burglar’s Dog: Alternative Guide to Drinking in Newcastle upon Tyne, Tonto Press, →ISBN, page 267:
      I would have said the cheap beer, but imagining the place stuffed full of whooping arseclowns off their faces on two-for-one makes my skin crawl.
    • 2016, S[tephen] M[ichael] Stirling, Prince of Outcasts (The Change), New York, N.Y.: ROC, →ISBN, page 172:
      The man was a perfidious arseclown, but he did put us onto some of our best scores.
    • 2017, Ian Collins, 67 People I’d Like To Slap, Biteback Publishing, →ISBN:
      It turned out that her dad was none other than Usain, our not so super-fast arseclown in the Nike boots.
    • 2022, J. Robert Kennedy, Inside the Wire, UnderMill Press:
      “What, and you expect a bonus for doing your job right, ya arseclown?”