backdoor
21backdoor trot(s) — n. a case of diarrhea. (From the time when people had to go out the backdoor to the outhouse.) □ I can’t go out tonight. I got a case of the backdoor trots. □ She gets the backdoor trot when she drinks wine …
22backdoor man — n a. a secret lover, especially a married woman s lover. The term is originally black American slang dating from at least the 1950s. ► I m your backdoor man... the men don t know, but the little girls understand. ( Back Door Man , recorded by The …
23backdoor selling — /ˌbækdɔ: selɪŋ/ noun the practice of bypassing an organisation’s bureaucracy and selling direct to the chief decision maker in it ● If we did not resort to backdoor selling the right department might never hear of us. ● The chairman was asked out …
24BackDoor — …
25Backdoor — …
26backdoor — /bak dawr , dohr /, adj. secret; furtive; illicit; indirect. Also, back door. [1605 15; adj. use of BACK DOOR] * * * …
27backdoor — noun a) An unprotected passageway by which a criminal can gain access to (an assumed to be) secure area. b) Anal sex …
28backdoor — ● ►en /bak dor/ n. f. ►SECU►SYSTM Porte d entrée cachée dans un système. Est souvent une porte de service discrète mais délibérément laissée par ses concepteurs ou ses réalisateurs, qui servait lors du débuggage et a été oubliée. En général tout… …
29backdoor — vb a. to commit adultery (with) ► In Australia, you d never get away with some of the things I ve seen here be cause you d get a punch in the mouth. We don t go in for backdooring someone else s woman. (Jamie Addicoat, fitness instructor, Ob… …
30backdoor — adj. secret, surreptitious, clandestine, furtive n. undocumented pathway for accessing a computer system or data contained within it (Computers) …