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Suck   /sək/   Listen
Suck

verb
(past & past part. sucked; pres. part. sucking)
1.
Draw into the mouth by creating a practical vacuum in the mouth.  "Suck on a straw" , "The baby sucked on the mother's breast"
2.
Draw something in by or as if by a vacuum.
3.
Attract by using an inexorable force, inducement, etc..  Synonym: suck in.
4.
Be inadequate or objectionable.
5.
Provide sexual gratification through oral stimulation.  Synonyms: blow, fellate, go down on.
6.
Take in, also metaphorically.  Synonyms: absorb, draw, imbibe, soak up, sop up, suck up, take in, take up.  "She drew strength from the minister's words"
7.
Give suck to.  Synonyms: breastfeed, give suck, lactate, nurse, suckle, wet-nurse.  "You cannot nurse your baby in public in some places"  Antonym: bottlefeed.
noun
1.
The act of sucking.  Synonyms: sucking, suction.



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"Suck" Quotes from Famous Books



... fool shall not err, and all narrow foreheads and limited understandings, and poor, simple uneducated people as well as philosophers and geniuses have to learn love by their hearts and not by their heads, and by a sense of need and a humble trust and a daily experience have to appropriate and suck out the blessing that lies in the love of Jesus Christ. Blessed be His name! The end of all aristocracies of culture and superciliousness of intellect lies in that great truth that we possess the deepest knowledge and highest wisdom ...
— Expositions of Holy Scripture - Ephesians; Epistles of St. Peter and St. John • Alexander Maclaren

... the young Sitaris-grubs do not feed on the Anthophora's body, I have sometimes placed within their reach, in a glass jar, some Bees that have long been dead and are completely dried up. On these dry corpses, fit at most for gnawing, but certainly containing nothing to suck, the Sitaris-larvae took up their customary position and there remained motionless as on the living insect. They obtain nothing, therefore, from the Anthophora's body; but perhaps they nibble her fleece, even as the Bird-lice ...
— The Glow-Worm and Other Beetles • Jean Henri Fabre

... If help came, it would have to come from the extraordinary. Hence the extreme peril of her case. Hence the bitter fear and humiliation she felt as she drudged shabbily on in Manchester House, hiding herself as much as possible from public view. Men can suck the heady juice of exalted self-importance from the bitter weed of failure—failures are usually the most conceited of men: even as was James Houghton. But to a woman, failure is another matter. For her it means failure ...
— The Lost Girl • D. H. Lawrence

... were you to start a nice hindquarter of beef, which had to pass through all these hands, and every commissary take a choice steak and roast off it, there would be but little ever reach the company, and the poor man among the Johnnies had to feast like bears in winter—they had to suck their paws—but the rich Johnnies who had money could go to almost any of the gentlemen denominated commissaries (they ought to have been called cormorants) and buy of them much nice fat beef and meal and flour and sugar and ...
— "Co. Aytch" - Maury Grays, First Tennessee Regiment - or, A Side Show of the Big Show • Sam R. Watkins

... foreign food thy teeming ewes shall fear, No touch contagious spread its influence here. Happy old man! here 'mid th' accustom'd streams And sacred springs, you'll shun the scorching beams; While from yon willow-fence, thy picture's bound, The bees that suck their flow'ry stores around, Shall sweetly mingle with the whispering boughs Their lulling murmurs, and invite repose: While from steep rocks the pruner's song is heard; Nor the soft-cooing dove, thy fav'rite bird, Meanwhile shall cease ...
— The Works of Samuel Johnson - Volume IV [The Rambler and The Adventurer] • Samuel Johnson


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