English edit

Etymology edit

From jiggly.

Noun edit

jigglies pl (plural only)

  1. (slang) Breasts.
    • 1974, Edward Whittemore, Quin’s Shanghai Circus, New York, N.Y., Chicago, Ill., San Francisco, Calif.: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, →ISBN, page 173:
      He pulled her again and her dress tore, the jigglies were right in front of him. He squeezed the jigglies, squeezed himself, got his trousers down as the two of them crashed backward through the palm trees into the middle of the room.
    • 1989, Desmond Lowden, The Shadow Run, London: André Deutsch Limited, →ISBN, page 84:
      And she oiled everything, including her jigglies.
    • 2001, Clive Barker, Coldheart Canyon, London: HarperCollinsPublishers, →ISBN, page 207:
      But it did go some way to explaining the curious passages of starry flesh and bone she kept seeing: Garbo’s throat on the woman, Victor Mature in this breast-obsessed male. / ‘Udders,’ he said. / ‘Jigglies,’ she countered. ‘Chi-chis. Kazooms –’ / Oh, she had a million.
    • 2006, Jaide Fox, Ashley Ladd, Shizuko Lee, Sky Pirates, Lake Park, Ga.: New Concepts Publishing, Inc., →ISBN, page 185:
      She tried posing on her hands and knees facing the door, in case he was a tit man and was turned on by the jigglies.
    • 2020, Manjula Padmanabhan, Blood and Laughter, Hachette India, →ISBN:
      RUSTOM: (standing at the MODEL’s feet, staring down at her) All right, Miss Birthday Suit! Time to sing us a few party songs now – / TARUN: Don’t speak to her like that! / SWARUP: Don’t frighten her – / RUSTOM: (to the others) Ooof – a woman who’s willing to air her jigglies isn’t going to be frightened of a few questions!