See also: pie-hole and pie hole

English edit

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Etymology edit

From pie +‎ hole. Coined by Stephen King in his 1983 novel Christine.

Pronunciation edit

  • (file)

Noun edit

piehole (plural pieholes)

  1. (slang, offensive) A person's mouth.
    • 1983, Stephen King, Christine:
      “You trying to help your buddy right out of here, Junior?” “No,” I said. “Sir.” “Then shut your pie-hole.”
    • 2007, David Sherman, Dan Cragg, Firestorm, →ISBN, page 258:
      "[T]hey kin always do a mouth transplant on ya. Be a big improvement over the piehole you was born with."

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