Dictionary Definition
cum n : the thick white fluid containing
spermatozoa that is ejaculated by the male genital tract [syn:
semen, seed, seminal
fluid, ejaculate]
User Contributed Dictionary
Homophones
Etymology 1
From cum.Preposition
- Used in constructions such as: an X-cum-Y to describe something
that has two functions, or has been converted from one function to
another.
- a bus-cum-greenhouse—a (probably old) bus that has been converted to a greenhouse
- 1985, George
Bernard Shaw,
Collected Letters: 1926-1950, University of California/Viking,
page 31,
- 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.
-
- Note: 1985 is the publication date, but the text was written between 1926 and 1950
- Used in English place names to describe combined parishes that
function as a single unit.
- Chorlton-cum-Hardy
Etymology 2
Variant of come.Noun
- Male semen.
- Female ejaculatory discharge.
Derived terms
Translations
male semen
- Catalan: llet
- Finnish: sperma
- German: Sperma
- Greek: χύσι, χύσιμο
- Italian: sborra
- Norwegian: sperm, sæd
- Polish: sperma, nasienie
- Portuguese: esperma, gozo, porra
- Romanian: sloboz
- Spanish: leche
female ejaculatory discharge
- Portuguese: gozo
checktrans-top
translations to be checked
- ttbc Arabic: (mánī)
- ttbc Armenian: թոխում (t‘oχum)
- ttbc Esperanto: curo
- ttbc French: jus
- ttbc Japanese: イク (iku)
- ttbc Persian: (mani)
- ttbc Russian: плоть (plot’) , сок (sok) , семя (semya)
Verb
Translations
to have an orgasm; to ejaculate
- Armenian: թափել
- Catalan: escórrer(se)
- Dutch: klaarkomen, komen
- Finnish: saada orgasmi, tulla
- French: venir, juter, éjaculer, jouir
- German: abspritzen, kommen
- Greek: χύνω
- Italian: venire, eiaculare, sborrare
- Japanese: いく
- Latin: eiaculare
- Polish: wytryskiwać
- Portuguese: ejacular, gozar, esporrar
- Romanian: slobozi
- Russian: кончать, доходить
- Spanish: venir, eyacular, correrse
Irish
Etymology
From cummaidPronunciation
- lang=ga|[kuːmˠ]
- lang=ga|[kʊmˠ]
Conjugation
Mutation
Latin
Preposition
- with
- magna cum laude — “with great praise”
- summa cum laude — “with greatest praise”
- magna cum laude — “with great praise”
Usage notes
As a preposition, Latin cum governs the ablative case.Suffix
- In the context of "after personal pronouns": with
- mecum — “with me”
- tecum — “with you (singular)”
- mecum — “with me”
Usage notes
As a conjunction, certain authors spell cum as quum.Rohingya
Etymology
Noun
Romanian
Etymology
quomodo.Pronunciation
Adverb
Extensive Definition
Come may refer to:
- Come (US band), an American indie rock band, formed in 1990
- Come (UK
band), a British noise project founded in 1979
- Come Organisation, its record label
- Come (album), a 1994 album by Prince
- COMe, COM_Express, a Single-board computer type
Cum may refer to:
- CUM, an acronym for Montreal Urban Community
- Cum, a Latin word with several meanings, including with, when, since, and although (used in Latin honors)
- Cum, cubic meters (not very common)
In sexual slang:
cum in German: Cum
cum in Esperanto: CUM
cum in French: CUM
cum in Simple English: Cum
cum in Italian: CUM