Part of speech:
n. The part of speech reflects that used in the
full entry, and not necessarily the part of speech as it is used in the quotation below.
Quotation: Anyway so now my brain is on fire—everywhere i look i see god’s wink.
Author:
“Whorella Mundane”
(This author is either a pseudonym or is not clearly named in the original source.)
Date of publication:
Oct. 26, 2006
This cite belongs to a full entry for God wink.
Comments:
God's wink.
I believe it refers to that part of the female genitals that is observable when a woman is nude and standing.
Think about the implications for this definition.
I've been trying to find an online reference to this definition; so far, I've found a poem by Rod McKuen.....
And life is never absolute.
It runs on chicken feet
between God's wink
and the Devil's asshole.
Somewhere in that distance
love is found or finds us.
- From The Sound of Solitude, 1983
http://www.rodmckuen.com/flights/280606.htm
You may not agree with the reference, but I'll keep searching for other citations.
M.
by Mark Barnette 13 Dec 07, 0853 GMT