blind pig
English
Etymology
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Pronunciation
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Noun
blind pig (plural blind pigs)
- (US, slang) A blind tiger or speakeasy. [from 19th c.]
- 1913 August, Jack London, chapter VI, in John Barleycorn, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., →OCLC, page 48:
- Then the harpooner carried away a pink flask to be filled in some blind pig, for there were no licensed saloons in that locality. We drank the cheap rotgut out of tumblers.
- 1993, TC Boyle, The Road to Wellville, Penguin, published 1994, page 29:
- This was […] the woman whose every look and movement stirred him in a way he couldn't describe (but had tried to, time and again, to his classmates, to the rare Barnard girl he asked to the theater or a concert, and to the tarts and working girls he discovered in the blind pigs and outside the vaudeville houses).
- 2012, Jeremy Williams, Detroit: The Black Bottom Community:
- According to a Rutgers University Web site dedicated to the riots, “The Detroit Riot of 1967 began when police vice squad officers executed a raid on an after hours drinking club or 'blind pig' in a predominantly black neighborhoods located at Twelfth Street and Clairmount Avenue […]
- (Southern US) A police officer who has been bribed to ignore illegal activities.
- (Internet) A Web address on the Deep Web that piggybacks on a public domain but is not visible to the system.
- 2017, Dean Koontz, The Silent Corner, page 197:
- The Web address isn't officially registered, it's a blind pig.
Derived terms
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