cunt

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cunt是什么意思
英式音标:[kʌnt]英式读音
美式音标:[kʌnt]美式读音
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概况:

n. 女性阴部;性交;淫妇

词义:

n.

阴道;女性的阴部;(用于辱骂)讨厌鬼;龟孙子

变形

复数:cunts

英英释义

cunt[ kʌnt ]

n.

a woman who is thoroughly disliked

同义词:bitch

obscene terms for female genitals

同义词:pusspussyslitsnatchtwat

用法:

双语例句

用作名词(n.)

A laboratory cunt and no litmus paper that could take her color.
他家族中的女人们在九世纪曾两次改换祖先,到了文艺复兴期间又换了一次。

He had warned me that if he didn't answer it would mean that he was sleeping with someone, probably his Georgia cunt.
他曾预先告诉过我,如果不开门就是说他在同某人睡觉,也许是他那个格鲁吉亚女人。

权威例句

Identification of humans using gait

THE CYTOARCHITECTONIC ORGANIZATION OF THE SPINAL CORD IN THE RABBIT

Gait-Based Recognition of Humans Using Continuous HMMs

Gait Analysis for Human Identification

Gait Analysis for Human Identification

Identification of humans using gait. IEEE Trans Image Process

Combining multiple evidences for gait recognition

Combining multiple evidences for gait recognition

Molecular Clefts Derived from 9,9′‐spirobi[9H‐fluorene] for enantioselective complexation of pyranosides and dicarboxylic acids

The predictive capability of failure mode concept-based strength criteria for multi-directional laminates—part B
同义词:sexual intercourse,gender
英语词源:

cunt

cunt: [13] The first known reference to the word cunt is in an early medieval Oxford street-name: Gropecuntlane (it was afterwards renamed Magpie lane). This was around 1230, and from later in the same century there are records of a street of the same name (presumably the haunt of prostitutes) in London, probably around the area of modern Cheapside. York, too, had its Grapcunt lane in the 15th century. Cunt has a number of Germanic cognates, including Old Norse kunta, Middle Dutch kunte, and possibly Middle High German kotze ‘prostitute’, which point to a prehistoric Germanic ancestor *kunton ‘female genitals’, but beyond that its origins are not known.A link has been suggested with Latin cuneus ‘wedge’.

cunt (n.)

"female intercrural foramen," or, as some 18c. writers refer to it, "the monosyllable," Middle English cunte "female genitalia," by early 14c. (in Hendyng's "Proverbs" -- ʒeve þi cunte to cunni[n]g, And crave affetir wedding), akin to Old Norse kunta, Old Frisian, Middle Dutch, and Middle Low German kunte, from Proto-Germanic *kunton, which is of uncertain origin. Some suggest a link with Latin cuneus "wedge," others to PIE root *geu- "hollow place," still others to PIE *gwen-, root of queen and Greek gyne "woman." The form is similar to Latin cunnus "female pudenda" (also, vulgarly, "a woman"), which is likewise of disputed origin, perhaps literally "gash, slit," from PIE *sker- (1) "to cut," or literally "sheath," from PIE *kut-no-, from root *(s)keu- "to conceal, hide."

Hec vulva: a cunt. Hic cunnus: idem est. [from Londesborough Illustrated Nominale, c. 1500, in "Anglo-Saxon and Old English Vocabularies," eds. Wright and Wülcker, vol. 1, 1884]

First known reference in English apparently is in a compound, Oxford street name Gropecuntlane cited from c. 1230 (and attested through late 14c.) in "Place-Names of Oxfordshire" (Gelling & Stenton, 1953), presumably a haunt of prostitutes. Used in medical writing c. 1400, but avoided in public speech since 15c.; considered obscene since 17c. in Middle English also conte, counte, and sometimes queinte, queynte (for this, see q). Chaucer used quaint and queynte in "Canterbury Tales" (late 14c.), and Andrew Marvell might be punning on quaint in "To His Coy Mistress" (1650).

"What eyleth yow to grucche thus and grone? Is it for ye wolde haue my queynte allone?" [Wife of Bath's Tale]

Under "MONOSYLLABLE" Farmer lists 552 synonyms from English slang and literature before launching into another 5 pages of them in French, German, Italian, Spanish, and Portuguese. [A sampling: Botany Bay, chum, coffee-shop, cookie, End of the Sentimental Journey, fancy bit, Fumbler's Hall, funniment, goatmilker, heaven, hell, Itching Jenny, jelly-bag, Low Countries, nature's tufted treasure, parenthesis, penwiper, prick-skinner, seminary, tickle-toby, undeniable, wonderful lamp, and aphrodisaical tennis court, and, in a separate listing, Naggie. Dutch cognate de kont means "a bottom, an arse," but Dutch also has attractive poetic slang ways of expressing this part, such as liefdesgrot, literally "cave of love," and vleesroos "rose of flesh." Alternative form cunny is attested from c. 1720 but is certainly much earlier and forced a change in the pronunciation of coney (q.v.), but it was good for a pun while coney was still the common word for "rabbit": "A pox upon your Christian cockatrices! They cry, like poulterers' wives, 'No money, no coney.' " [Philip Massinger: "The Virgin-Martyr," Act I, Scene 1, 1622]

cunt

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