Of the suggestions made "sugere" is a Classical Latin word for "to suck".
2006-11-10 09:03:06
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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To suck = fellare
This is why "fellatio" is what it is.
~~added later~~
To MyPreshus, your term "combibo" or "bibere" are meaning to ingest by drinking...hence the english term "imbibe" meaning to drink. We are not talking about sucking soda through a straw. We are simply talking about sucking (no connotation added). See the wiki article below for confirmation.
2006-11-06 12:58:52
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answer #2
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answered by Jay 6
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sugere, exsugere = suck, as on teats, or sucking out a snakebite.
sorbere, exsorbere = suck in, as a whirlpool, or sucking blood.
bibere, ebibere = drink in, literally or figuratively.
"fellare" is not listed at all in my Latin dictionary.
2006-11-07 01:14:59
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answer #3
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answered by bh8153 7
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Ciuccia
Pronnounced:Chucha
2006-11-06 23:16:12
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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combibo (1) -bibere -bibi [to drink in , suck up].
concipio -cipere -cepi -ceptum
(1) [to take together , contain, hold]; of ideas, [to express in a certain form of words].
(2) [to take completely in, absorb]; of fluids, [to suck in]; of fire, [to catch]; of air, [to draw in]; often also [to conceive]. Transf., [to take in, grasp by the senses or intellect; to conceive, imagine]; of passions, [to begin to feel]; of action, [to devise], esp. in bad sense.
*** EDIT: My apologies to Jay. I stand corrected!
2006-11-06 13:03:04
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answer #5
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answered by MyPreshus 7
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fellare
2006-11-10 04:09:34
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answer #6
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answered by lord bacon 2
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in latin? Like Quiere e le ison? or like spanish?
in spanish the verb is "chupar" the command version being "Chupa" ... i dunno about latin
2006-11-06 13:00:23
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answer #7
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answered by Chipper 3
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And what then if s is replaced by f?
2006-11-06 13:02:16
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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