by Dorothy March 02, 2005
by hecklebod November 09, 2006
A good Christian woman. Will talk to you about god for as long as it takes. Be careful though, she doesn’t have much of a sense of humour. Humour is a sin. On the other hand she will always have your back and only wants the best for you.
She’s quite the gossip though, god isn’t the only person she will share your secrets with. Watch out
She’s quite the gossip though, god isn’t the only person she will share your secrets with. Watch out
by JesusLovesUs2069 November 02, 2018
1. A young woman who has the ambition to take on sexually a lion, a scarecrow, AND a tinman in a universal movie, The Wizard of Oz.
2. A girl who prefers sex with either a lion, tiger or bear rather than a man.
2. A girl who prefers sex with either a lion, tiger or bear rather than a man.
by soundbounder June 16, 2008
Good sir, the madam at the end of the wine bar wanted me to inform you that she would very much enjoy your man meat in her brown eye. She's a real back dorothy.
by wirtydord March 10, 2015
Homosexual; a gay or queer man.
Gay historians say that the term came into popular use in the 1950's as gays and lesbians developed a special connection with Judy Garland, whose ballads of hope and despair and whose relentless spirit, and tragic history, mirrored their struggles in everyday life. She wasn't the first diva or drama queen, but certainly the one who resonated the most to a generation of gays and lesbians. Garland's most famous role -- as the ever-optimistic and wistful Dorothy in the 1939 classic "The Wizard of Oz" -- gave gays and lesbians a "secret" code word which they could use to refer to themselves. At cocktail parties or company gatherings where one could not be comfortably "out and proud," gays would inquire discreetly of each other, "Are you a 'Friend of Dorothy?'" The wink-wink admission of "I am, too!" would likely lead to fabulous and fast bonding in an age when gay bars were clandestine, and in some cases dangerous.
Today, the term is used mostly by Baby Boomers and an older generation of gays and lesbians; the gay members of MTV kids and Generations X and Y would probably not recognize the meaning of "FOD" unless they learned it from some older friends!
Gay historians say that the term came into popular use in the 1950's as gays and lesbians developed a special connection with Judy Garland, whose ballads of hope and despair and whose relentless spirit, and tragic history, mirrored their struggles in everyday life. She wasn't the first diva or drama queen, but certainly the one who resonated the most to a generation of gays and lesbians. Garland's most famous role -- as the ever-optimistic and wistful Dorothy in the 1939 classic "The Wizard of Oz" -- gave gays and lesbians a "secret" code word which they could use to refer to themselves. At cocktail parties or company gatherings where one could not be comfortably "out and proud," gays would inquire discreetly of each other, "Are you a 'Friend of Dorothy?'" The wink-wink admission of "I am, too!" would likely lead to fabulous and fast bonding in an age when gay bars were clandestine, and in some cases dangerous.
Today, the term is used mostly by Baby Boomers and an older generation of gays and lesbians; the gay members of MTV kids and Generations X and Y would probably not recognize the meaning of "FOD" unless they learned it from some older friends!
by SteveinNY May 26, 2008
Stacey had such a Dorothy Complex she let some dude who was dumb af with less qualifications than her get promoted when she’d been working towards that spot for years.
by ShesWorthyOfWords September 03, 2019