释义 |
Definition of swive in English: swiveverb swʌɪvswīv [with object]humorous, archaic Have sexual intercourse with. Example sentencesExamples - Each slave laid hold of a damsel [and swived her] and another slave [came forth and] did the like with the queen; and when they had done their occasions, they all returned whence they came.
- Phyllis, lying on her side, throws her leg over the thigh of the gallant who, stretched on the couch facing her, is swiving her; at the same time offering her buttocks to her other lover.
- Dr Poynting said swiving was a 17th century word for sex, found in the erotic verses of the Earl of Rochester, and was equivalent in those days to the crudest modern swear words.
- Ragnor Magnusson was in the midst of swiving the most beautiful woman in all the Norselands, and he was bored.
- And all the pretty little girls that our heroes swived were just being lied to and used.
Origin Middle English: apparently from the Old English verb swīfan 'move (along a course), sweep'. Rhymes alive, arrive, chive, Clive, connive, contrive, deprive, dive, drive, five, gyve, hive, I've, jive, live, MI5, revive, rive, shrive, skive, strive, survive, thrive Definition of swive in US English: swiveverbswīv [with object]humorous, archaic Have sexual intercourse with. Example sentencesExamples - And all the pretty little girls that our heroes swived were just being lied to and used.
- Phyllis, lying on her side, throws her leg over the thigh of the gallant who, stretched on the couch facing her, is swiving her; at the same time offering her buttocks to her other lover.
- Ragnor Magnusson was in the midst of swiving the most beautiful woman in all the Norselands, and he was bored.
- Each slave laid hold of a damsel [and swived her] and another slave [came forth and] did the like with the queen; and when they had done their occasions, they all returned whence they came.
- Dr Poynting said swiving was a 17th century word for sex, found in the erotic verses of the Earl of Rochester, and was equivalent in those days to the crudest modern swear words.
Origin Middle English: apparently from the Old English verb swīfan ‘move (along a course), sweep’. |