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  1. Dictionary
    cum
    /kʌm/

    verb

    • 1. have an orgasm.

    noun

    • 1. semen ejaculated by a man at an orgasm.

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Feb 19, 2024 · Definition of cum @andy520 It appears your question was successful answered, but if there’s still confusion: “something-cum-something” — such as gardener-cum-handyman — means the person (or object, or place, or room in your house..) functions as both of those things. So, he is both a gardener and a handyman :) Other examples may be: “I don’t mind living in a small apartment. My ...

  3. Nov 25, 2011 · Etymonline explains: cum (verb and noun) seems to be a modern (by 1973) variant of the sexual sense of come that originated in pornographic writing, perhaps first in the noun sense. This "experience sexual orgasm" slang meaning of come (perhaps originally come off) is attested from 1650, in "Walking In A Meadowe Greene," in a folio of "loose ...

  4. About that matter, Etymonline says of the use of the Latin cum preposition: The sexual cum seems to have no connection with Latin cum, the preposition meaning “with, together with”, which is occasionally used in English in local names of combined parishes or benifices (e.g. Chorlton-cum-Hardy), in popular Latin phrases (e.g. cum laude), or as a combining word to indicate a dual nature or ...

  5. Apr 9, 2014 · 3. From the context it appears to mean “cum in,” and your friend is suggesting that the girl engages in a variety of sexual acts. “She can pretty much [take it in] anything,” with CIM meaning “in mouth” (oral sex) and CIB “in butt” (anal sex). CID might mean “in deep” (without a condom), or it could be the similar-sounding ...

  6. Accumulative means having the characteristic of tending to accumulate. Cumulative means having built up or accumulated over time. E.g. something has a cumulative effect, or is a cumulative result of something. It is more specific in meaning than 'accumulative', in that it

  7. Aug 11, 2011 · As I am totally unfamiliar with the phrase, “take something cum grano salis,” I checked online dictionaries. Both Free Merriam-Webster and Oxford Dictionaries had an entry of 'cum grano salis' as a phrase of Latin origin meaning ‘take something with a grain (pinch) of salt.’ I wonder how popular this phrase is among native speakers.

  8. Dec 7, 2010 · In the literal sense, this refers to something becoming untied, unwrapped, unfastened, etc. For example: Be careful with that gift. If it comes undone, they'll be able to see what is inside. In the figurative sense, it means that something has either not gone as planned, or has failed in some way. E.g. a plan can come undone meaning it hasn't ...

  9. 4. In Ryan and Jetha's Sex at Dawn (2010, Ch. 5), they suggest that both 'jism' and 'jazz' come from the Ki-Kongo word dinza, meaning "to ejaculate", citing Robert Farris Thompson's Flash of the Spirit (1984) and Ventura's essay "Hear that Long Snake Moan" (1986). Culturally, rooting this word in an African language seems more likely to me than ...

  10. Dec 19, 2013 · Early dictionary coverage of 'quim' Francis Grose, A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue (1785) has nine slang terms for "the private parts" of a girl or woman—to wit: bumbo, Carvel's ring, cauliflower, cock alley (or cock lane), commodity, madge, money, muff, and notch, plus an unidentified tenth one, ****, that appears in the entry for cauliflower.

  11. What is the origin of the word boner? Trying to find the roots for its prevalent usage, especially in North America. According to a dictionary it means an erect penis.