Skip to content

docking

noun

  1. sexual practice where a penis is inserted into another penis's foreskin/sheath
  2. (cause to) park (a ship) in a dock
L319658 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

name

Etymology: From Old English docce (“dock, a weedy plant”) + -ing.

  1. A village and civil parish in King's Lynn and West Norfolk district, Norfolk, England (OS grid ref TF765370).
  2. A habitational surname from Old English.

noun

Etymology: From Middle English dockyng. By surface analysis, dock + -ing.

  1. The process of cutting off or trimming the tail or ears of an animal.
  2. The securing of a vessel to the quayside with cables.
  3. The process of connecting one spacecraft to another.
  4. The male homosexual sex act involving two men co-joined by their penises, with overlapping foreskins.

    From their discussions, the participants mentioned informational and stimulating variations. For touching, one could always use feather dusters, a massage, a tongue in the ear, spooning and sucking toes (known in New York City as "shrimping). There's also "docking" for foreskinned men who can creatively stroke appendages.

  5. A method which predicts the preferred orientation of one molecule to a second when bound to each other to form a stable complex.

verb

Etymology: Etymology tree English dock Proto-Indo-European *-onts Proto-Germanic *-ndz Proto-West Germanic *-andī Old English -ende Middle English -ynge English -ing English docking From dock + -ing.

  1. present participle and gerund of dock
  2. Culinary term for pricking many small holes into doughs and pastry.