swive
11sex — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Interaction between the sexes Nouns 1. gender; sexuality; eroticism, sensuality; male, female, masculine, feminine; free love, promiscuity; facts of life, birds and the bees; conjugal rights; Kinsey… …
12swift — [OE] The etymological meaning of swift appears to be ‘moving along a course’; ‘speed’ is a secondary development. It goes back ultimately to the prehistoric Germanic base *swei ‘swing, bend’, which also produced English sweep, swivel [14], and… …
13fuck — (v.) until recently a difficult word to trace, in part because it was taboo to the editors of the original OED when the F volume was compiled, 1893 97. Written form only attested from early 16c. OED 2nd edition cites 1503, in the form fukkit;… …
14swivel — (n.) c.1300, from frequentative form of stem of O.E. verb swifan to move in a course, sweep (a class I strong verb), from P.Gmc. *swipanan (Cf. O.Fris. swiva to be uncertain, O.N. svifa to rove, ramble, drift ), from PIE root *swei swing, bend,… …
15switch-hitter — a person with both homosexual and heterosexual tastes From the American ambidextrous baseball player. In obsolete British use, to switch was to copulate, along with to swinge and to swive (Grose). o switch on means to excite sexually,… …
16swift — [OE] The etymological meaning of swift appears to be ‘moving along a course’; ‘speed’ is a secondary development. It goes back ultimately to the prehistoric Germanic base *swei ‘swing, bend’, which also produced English sweep, swivel [14], and… …
17swewyt — obs. Sc. pa. tense of swive …
18sweype — sweyr, sweyre, sweyt(e, sweythyli, swferane, swhyve: see swaip Obs., sweer a., swear, sweet, swithly, sovereign, swive …
19swych — swych(e Swycher, swycht, swye, swyer, swyfe, swyffit: see such, Swisser, swithe adv., sway v., square, squire, swive …
20swyche — swych(e Swycher, swycht, swye, swyer, swyfe, swyffit: see such, Swisser, swithe adv., sway v., square, squire, swive …
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