Plug : nm Usually cylindrical part entering the neck of bottles, decanters, flasks, and which is used to stopper them.
The youngest child in a family: My little plug!
Take a cork: get older.
Stopper (carafe): large diamond.
Expressions: It's stronger than playing cork! it's a bit strong, it's extraordinary.
Pushing (sending, throwing, throwing) the cork a little (too) far: exaggerating, going too far, going hard.
Put a stopper on someone: silence him, lock him up, imprison him.
Put a stopper: shut up.
Pulling a plug: thief who has served ten years in prison (thieves' slang).
Pick up a plug: get yelled at.
Manly member.
Detach the stopper: have a bowel movement.
Be paid by the cork: for bar coaches, be paid according to the number of bottles (of champagne) sold
(See Corker).
Formerly, stopper: penis which blocks the neck of the woman.
Sit on the stopper: take a sitting position during the sexual act.
Sit on the cork: sit on a cock, so as to be fucked, either frog from the front or doggy style from behind.
The expression "Push the plug a little (too) far": To exaggerate, to go too far (in an accusation, an affirmation, demands…).
Lexicographers assume, without any certainty, that the expression comes from one of the two main games where a stopper is used: the stopper game, which dates from the beginning of the XNUMXth century, where it was necessary to cut down with a puck corks surmounted by coins, or the pétanque where the jack is called the stopper. In the second case, we hear from here the pagnolesque but but grumpy Caesar clamor "Oh, Escartfigue, you push the plug a little far! »To his companion who, with his ball, has just moved the jack a little too far, and, consequently, to complicate the rest of the game.