• Dinger

    Pronunciation

    • UK IPA: /ˈdɪŋ(g)É™(ɹ)/
    • Rhymes: -ɪŋə(ɹ)

    Origin

    From ding + -er.

    Full definition of dinger

    Noun

    dinger

    (plural dingers)
    1. A bell or chime.
      • 1997, Sarah Gregory, Public Trust, Signet (1997), ISBN 9780451190765, page 47:Sharon patted the dinger to call for service.
    2. (baseball) A home run.The starting pitcher gave up three dingers.
      • 1989, John Holway, "Strikeouts: The High Cost of Hitting Home Runs", Baseball Digest, June 1989:He should know, he fanned 2597 times — far more than any other man — but made millions hitting 563 dingers.
      • 1997, Hank Davis, Small-Town Heroes: Images of Minor League Baseball, University of Nebraska Press (2003), ISBN 0803266391, page 264:Then as you're taking his picture, say something about the thirty dingers he's going to hit this season. You get that little extra smile on his face.
      • 2008, Mike Stone (radio personality) & , The Great Book of Detroit Sports Lists, Running Press (2008), ISBN 9780762433544, page 209:For you youngsters out there, hitting 50 dingers in the pre-steroid craze days of the early 90s was an actual accomplishment; the only questionable substance Fielder was putting in his body were McRib sandwiches.
    3. (North America, slang) The penis.
      • 1994, Max Evans, Bluefeather Fellini in the Sacred Realm, University Press of Colorado (1994), ISBN 9780553565409, page 131:"He had a red wool sock on his dinger. That's all."
    4. (Australian slang, dated) A condom.
    5. (Australian slang) The buttocks, the anus.Let′s leave them to sit on their dingers for a while.
      • 1955, Norman Bartlett, Island Victory, Angus and Robertson (1955), page 6:"We'd get even more out of 'em if some of the pilots sat on their dingers less and polished their kites more."
      • 1979, Derek Maitland, Breaking Out, Allen Lane (1979), page 63:And why had he belted the Australian envoy flat on his dinger in that Spanish bar?
      • 1988, Peter Pinney, The Barbarians: A Soldier's New Guinea Diary, University of Queensland Press (1988), ISBN 9780702221583, page 109:"Yeah? Well, stand up anyone who's got a three-inch mortar hid up his dinger!"
    6. (Australian slang) A catapult, a shanghai.
      • 2010, Gordon Briscoe, Racial Folly: A Twentieth-Century Aboriginal Family, Anu E Press (2010), ISBN 9781921666209, page 59:We made our 'dingers' (as we called them) out of truck tyre inner tubes that were heavy-duty rubber that could shoot a stone a very long distance.

    Synonyms

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