Cornhole (slang)


Cornhole is a sexual slang vulgarism for the anus. The term came into use in the 1910s in the United States. Its verb form, to cornhole, which came into use in the '30s, means 'to have anal sex'.

Connotations and variants

The term is apparently derived "from the practice in the days of the outhouse of using dried corn cobs for toilet paper."
By the middle of the 20th century, the term was used among American criminals. According to a 1944 report on male-male prison rape, the term had taken on a more specific meaning of taking the penetrative role in anal sex. It was also popularized in part through use in gay culture.
In a similar context, a corn husk is a "condom", especially one manufactured for anal intercourse.
According to linguist Jonathan Lighter, to cornhole and variant non-derived synonyms have developed as compound verbs: to corncob and to corndog . Linguists have noted the verb form as an example of possible compound verbs in English. There is debate whether such words are genuine compounds or pseudo-compounds.
Cornholio, the alter ego of Beavis from Beavis and Butt-head, is a play on the word cornhole, as his catch phrase is “I am the Great Cornholio! I need TP for my bunghole!" The personality of Cornholio, in turn, became inspiration for the cocktail called the "Flaming Cornholio".
Comedian George Carlin made a short skit about that word in his 2005 show "Life Is Worth Losing", praising it for being tough-sounding and thus more honest than equivalent politically correct terms like "anal intercourse" or "anal rape", then imagining its use in a forensic investigation scene of a police procedurals television series, or pointing out that "in prison it's a social activity".