Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://citation.dbpedia.org/hash/dffc04a809783e2b5eb94e52ba8f3e34cec51cbb6ba7b4497e7a47dfb1265960> ?p ?o }
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- dffc04a809783e2b5eb94e52ba8f3e34cec51cbb6ba7b4497e7a47dfb1265960 date "1922-03-26".
- dffc04a809783e2b5eb94e52ba8f3e34cec51cbb6ba7b4497e7a47dfb1265960 isCitedBy Flapper.
- dffc04a809783e2b5eb94e52ba8f3e34cec51cbb6ba7b4497e7a47dfb1265960 newspaper "The New York Times".
- dffc04a809783e2b5eb94e52ba8f3e34cec51cbb6ba7b4497e7a47dfb1265960 quote "...The epithets she has evolved from her own lexicon are "junk", "necker" and "heavy necker". "Junk" is anything she considers unimportant or unworthy of consideration. A "necker" is a "petter" who puts her arms around a boy's neck. A "heavy necker" is a "petter" who hangs heavily on said neck. "Necking parties" have superseded "petting parties"".
- dffc04a809783e2b5eb94e52ba8f3e34cec51cbb6ba7b4497e7a47dfb1265960 title "Shifters No Longer Appeal to Slackers".