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cum

verb

  1. ejaculate, orgasm
L295218 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /kʌm/ / /kʊm/

adj

  1. Clipping of cumulative.

name

Etymology: An acronym of Canada, United States, and Mexico; sequenced north to south and humorously made to spell out "cum."

  1. Synonym of North American Union.

noun

  1. Abbreviation of cubic metre.

    The density of cement is 1440 kg/cum.

prep

Etymology: Learned borrowing from Latin cum (“with”).

  1. Used in indicating a thing or person which has two or more roles, functions, or natures, or which has changed from one to another.

    He is too good an actor to need that sort of tomfoolery: the effect will be far better if he is a credible mining camp elder-cum-publican.

    One driver-cum-fireman-cum-fitter looks after the three locomotives, [...].

verb

Etymology: Variant of come, attested (in the basic sense "come, move from further to nearer, arrive") since Old English. The sexual sense of come is attested since the 1650s. In this sense and spelling, attested from 1970s.

  1. To have an orgasm, to feel the sensation of an orgasm.

    Despite claims to the contrary, a woman can cum from anal sex alone.

  2. To ejaculate.

    Some men cum as much as 10 milliliters.

    I got no sensation down there, so I don't know when I'm hard, I don't know when I cum. My wife's gotta tell me.

  3. Eye dialect spelling of come (“move from further to nearer; arrive”).

    “Where'd he cum from?” the bowman inquired. “That's what we'd like ter know, yer see; where he cum from, and how he happen'd to cum,” responded the steersman. “But he's a jolly good feller, strong as a lion, […]”