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Sucker   /sˈəkər/   Listen
noun
Sucker  n.  
1.
One who, or that which, sucks; esp., one of the organs by which certain animals, as the octopus and remora, adhere to other bodies.
2.
A suckling; a sucking animal.
3.
The embolus, or bucket, of a pump; also, the valve of a pump basket.
4.
A pipe through which anything is drawn.
5.
A small piece of leather, usually round, having a string attached to the center, which, when saturated with water and pressed upon a stone or other body having a smooth surface, adheres, by reason of the atmospheric pressure, with such force as to enable a considerable weight to be thus lifted by the string; used by children as a plaything.
6.
(Bot.) A shoot from the roots or lower part of the stem of a plant; so called, perhaps, from diverting nourishment from the body of the plant.
7.
(Zool.)
(a)
Any one of numerous species of North American fresh-water cyprinoid fishes of the family Catostomidae; so called because the lips are protrusile. The flesh is coarse, and they are of little value as food. The most common species of the Eastern United States are the northern sucker (Catostomus Commersoni), the white sucker (Catostomus teres), the hog sucker (Catostomus nigricans), and the chub, or sweet sucker (Erimyzon sucetta). Some of the large Western species are called buffalo fish, red horse, black horse, and suckerel.
(b)
The remora.
(c)
The lumpfish.
(d)
The hagfish, or myxine.
(e)
A California food fish (Menticirrus undulatus) closely allied to the kingfish (a); called also bagre.
8.
A parasite; a sponger. See def. 6, above. "They who constantly converse with men far above their estates shall reap shame and loss thereby; if thou payest nothing, they will count thee a sucker, no branch."
9.
A hard drinker; a soaker. (Slang)
10.
A greenhorn; someone easily cheated, gulled, or deceived. (Slang, U.S.)
11.
A nickname applied to a native of Illinois. (U. S.)
12.
A person strongly attracted to something; usually used with for; as, he's a sucker for tall blondes.
13.
Any thing or person; usually implying annoyance or dislike; as, I went to change the blade and cut my finger on the sucker. (Slang)
Carp sucker, Cherry sucker, etc. See under Carp, Cherry, etc.
Sucker fish. See Sucking fish, under Sucking.
Sucker rod, a pump rod. See under Pump.
Sucker tube (Zool.), one of the external ambulacral tubes of an echinoderm, usually terminated by a sucker and used for locomotion. Called also sucker foot. See Spatangoid.



verb
Sucker  v. t.  (past & past part. suckered; pres. part. suckering)  
1.
To strip off the suckers or shoots from; to deprive of suckers; as, to sucker maize.
2.
To cheat or deceive (a gullible person); to make a sucker of (someone).



Sucker  v. i.  To form suckers; as, corn suckers abundantly.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Sucker" Quotes from Famous Books



... pro tem, on proving that he was a sucker from the great bough of the Fontaines of Melton; and why? Because, this effected, he had only to go along that bough by an established pedigree to the great trunk of the Funteyns of Salle, and the first Funteyn of Salle was said to be (and this he hoped to prove true) great-grandson of Robert ...
— Love Me Little, Love Me Long • Charles Reade

... and the wonderful facility with which it is propagated, render it at once the most useful of trees, and the greatest possible incentive to indolence. In less than one year after it is planted the fruit may be gathered and the proprietor has but to cut away the old stems and leave a sucker, which will produce fruit three months after. There are different sorts of bananas, and they are used in different ways; fresh, dried, fried, etc. The dried plantain, a great branch of trade in Michoacn, with its black shrivelled skin and ...
— Life in Mexico • Frances Calderon de la Barca

... scarcely be called a game, but the use of the sucker is so familiar to most boys that a description of it is surely not out of place in this chapter. A piece of sole leather is used, three or four inches square. It is cut into a circle and the edges carefully ...
— Outdoor Sports and Games • Claude H. Miller

... had played the tricks he dare ter play, The daisies would be bloomin' over his remains to-day; But, somehow, folks respected him and stood him to the last, Considerin' his superior connections in the past; So, when he bilked at poker, not a sucker drew a gun On the man who'd worked with Dana on the Noo ...
— John Smith, U.S.A. • Eugene Field

... inside my head had made me a sucker for the real one on my arm. Maragon had made his point. I might have reached the thirty-third degree, but I wasn't quite as big a shot as I thought I was. I could feel that rattler on my arm all the way ...
— Vigorish • Gordon Randall Garrett


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