Citations:GGG

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search

English citations of GGG

good, giving, and game

[edit]
2004
2008
2011
2012
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 2004 January 22, Dan Savage, “Savage Love: To The Truck Stop”, in The Stranger[1], retrieved 2012-09-30:
    While I think people should be GGG in the sack, I didn't say "game for anything."
  • 2004 February 12, Dan Savage, “Savage Love: Come to the Bash!”, in The Stranger[2], retrieved 2012-09-30:
    All sex partners should be good, giving, and game, as I've written, and living up to the GGG standard makes certain demands on us. First and foremost, I believe, being GGG requires us to ask ourselves if we're disturbed by our partner's fetishes/sexual requests because they're disturbing, or if we're disturbed because we've never really thought about it before.
  • 2008 July 14, MrKitty, “Sex, Love, Lust”, in Literotica[3], retrieved 2012-10-02:
    Every once in a while he would try to introduce something new, and Laura was GGG: good, giving, and game. She would try to keep an open mind, and even if she didn't enjoy the novelty, she would at least appreciate him for trying.
  • 2011 November 23, Lyra Marlowe, Girl Next Door, Akron: Ellora's Cave, →ISBN, →OL, page 83:
    She liked John. Liked having sex with him, naturally. He was totally GGG—good, giving and game.
  • 2012 February 17, Shishi Gokoro, “Neologophile”, in alt.sex.stories[4] (Usenet), message-ID <61856asstr$1329513040@assm.asstr.org>:
    "Oh, it would be so GGG, / if you'd clean my tool per orem."
  • 2012 September 10, Tom Miller, “Love Bytes: Just How Adventurous In Bed Are You?”, in YourTango[5], retrieved 2012-09-30:
    Most of us would like to be GGG ("good, giving and game" in Dan Savage parlance), but what if your dude or chick wants something really, really weird in the bedroom (or kitchen or trunk of a car)?
  • 2012 September 11, Debby Herbenick, “Science proves it: Dan Savage is right”, in Salon:
    Five years ago, sex columnist Dan Savage suggested that, when it comes to sex, we should all aim to be GGG (“good, giving, and game … Think ‘good in bed,’ ‘giving equal time and equal pleasure’ and ‘game for anything – within reason’”). Long embraced by his readers, the GGG approach now has support from a new scientific study published in the Journal of Sex Research.
  • 2012 September 25, Deanna Zandt, “Everything I Ever Needed To Know About Client Relationships I Learned From BDSM”, in Forbes[6]:
    Which also means that we should be open to hearing the needs of those we’re working with– the work equivalent of what Dan Savage calls GGG in sex: Good, Giving and Game.