mercredi 8 avril 2009

Langue anglaise

La langue anglaise est d'une surprenante richesse en locutions issues du cunnilingus :











cunnilalia : Possibly coined by J.E. Schmidt for his    Lecher's Lexicon    (1967) meaning to talk excessively or obscenely about the female genitals and cunnilingus.

cunnilinctio


cunnilinction


cunnilincto


  • Slangonyms and euphemisms: box-biter; butter-mouth; cake-eater; carpet muncher; cat-lapper (catlapper); clam diver; clit licker; cunnilingam; cunnilingham; cunnilinguant; cunning linguist; cunnophile; cunt-sucker; cuntlapper; cuntsucker; dive in the bushes; diver; doormat basher; face man; fanny nosher; fish queen; Frencher; gamahucheur; gash-eater; gift of tongues; growl-biter; head; head hunter; head-worker; high-diver; homophagist; keyhole whistler; kneeler; lap-lover; lapper; lécheur; lickbox; licker; linguist; lover under the lap; mohuncher; mouth-worker; mouther; muff-diver; muff muncher; Oom Paul; rug muncher; skin-diver; sixty-niner; slitlicker; sucker; suckstress; top-diver; trapeze artist; twat-sucker; twatter; vacuum cleaner; yodeler.



cunnilinctus


cunnilingam




cunnilingist


cunnilingtie


cunnilingual




cunnilinguate


cunnilingue


cunnilinguist




cunnilingus perficiens : Complete cunnilingus vigorously performed.

cunning : Elizabethan euphemism for the female genitals, punning  cunt , the vagina, and  cunning , shrewdness.

cunning linguist : Money Penny to James Bond (Pierce Brosnan) in    Tomorrow Never Dies    (1998): 'You always were a cunning linguist, James'.

cunning linguistics : A pun on cunnilingus. The expression is used by Robin Williams in    Mrs.Doubtfire      (1993)



cunniphrenia


cunnophile




cunnus


cunny


cunny-catcher


cunny-haunted


cunny-skin


cunny-warren




Et la liste est plus longue encore avec l'éthymolgie cunt




cunt : Vulgar and offensive term for:1. The female genitalia. Usage: Cunt has been taboo for at least 600 years; today, most women consider it to be the single most offensive word in the English language.


Etymology: Possibly from the Anglo-Saxon cynd, the Middle English form of the word was cunte / count(e) , corresponding to the Old Icelandic kunta and the Dutch and Low German kunte, meaning female pudenda. Other possible origins: 1) The Latin cunneus , meaning wedge, or cunnus , meaning pudend or vulva, a word regarded as obscene and eventually outlawed in Rome. Horace used it,
Cicero
did not. 2) From the Old English coint / coynte / qwaynt / cwithe , the womb. The Oxford English Dictionary cites its first use in 1230 when the word appeared in the name of a
London
lane, Gropecuntelane , listed among the stews (brothel area) of Southwark. It is also found in the familty name of some women from 1200 to 1500: Gunoka Cuntles, Bele Wydecuntlse (1318), Godwin Clawecuncte (1366), Simon Sitbithecunte, John Fillecunt, Robert Clevecunt (1302). Chaucer used a version of the word in
1383 in
The Miller's Tale. (See quote below.) See also: country


cunt carpet


cunt curtain


cunt down


cunt dracula


cunt face


cunt fart


cunt for hire






cunt hunt


cunt itch






cunt light


cunt lips


cunt pensioner


cunt pie


cunt rag


cunt shop


cunt stretcher


cunt torture


cunt-cuddling


cunt-hair


cunt-lap


cunt-stabber




cunt-sticker


cunt-stirrer


cunt-struck






cunt-tease


cunt-teaser


cunt-warren


cunted






cunting




cuntkin


cuntlapper


cuntlet


cuntline











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