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cunt

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also:CuntandCúnt

English

EnglishWikipedia has an article on:
Wikipedia

Alternative forms

Etymology

FromMiddle Englishcunte,queynt,queynte, fromOld English*cunte, fromProto-West Germanic*kuntā, fromProto-Germanic*kuntǭ. Cognate withWest Frisiankunte,Middle Dutchconte (Dutchkont(butt)), dialectalSwedishkunta, dialectalDanishkunte, andIcelandickunta. A relationship toLatincunnus has not been conclusively shown. LexicographerPartridge suggestscuneus(a wedge).

Pronunciation

Noun

cunt (countable anduncountable,pluralcunts)(vulgar)

  1. (countable, literally) The femalegenitalia, especially thevulva.
    • 1928,D[avid] H[erbert] Lawrence, chapter XII, inLady Chatterley’s Lover,[Germany?]: Privately printed,→OCLC:
      An' doesn't ter know?Cunt! It's thee down theer; an' what I get when I'm i'side thee, and what tha gets when I'm i'side thee; it's a' as it is, all on't.
    • 1983,Lawrence Durrell,Sebastian (Avignon Quintet), Faber & Faber, published2004, page1138:
      Ah! This power-house of human misery and ecstasy, thecunt!
    • 1962 [1959],William S. Burroughs,Naked Lunch, New York: Grove Press,page80:
      Blind boys grope out of huge pies, deteriorated schizophrenics pop from a rubbercunt, boys with horrible skin diseases rise from a black pond (sluggish fish nibble yellow turds on the surface).
    • 1991,Ted Tally,The Silence of the Lambs (motion picture), spoken by Miggs (Stuart Rudin):
      I can smell yourcunt.
    • 2004 June 23, Leo Benedictus, “A bit of hanky-panky”, inThe Guardian:
      Then there is a drum roll, and I watch open-mouthed as she bends over and produces a string of red cloths from her femininity. "What better way to celebrate 10 years of Camberwell Arts Week than pulling 10 red handkerchiefs out of mycunt?" she asks.
    • 2014, “Blow Your Trumpets Gabriel”, performed by Behemoth:
      I saw the Virgin'scunt spawning forth the snake
  2. (offensive, originally synecdochic, countable) An extremelyunpleasant orobjectionable person (in US, especially a woman; in Commonwealth more usually a man).
    Near-synonyms:bitch;see alsoThesaurus:jerk
    • 1994 [1993],Irvine Welsh,Trainspotting, London: Minerva,→ISBN,page 5:
      The taxi driver wisnae amused. He looked a rightcunt. Maist ay them do. The stamp-peyin self-employed ur truly the lowest form ay vermin oan god’s earth.
    • 2002, Jim Goad,Shit Magnet - One Man's Miraculous Ability to Absorb the World's Guilt, page196:
      Anne says that the only way she can rebel against her longsuffering hippie parents is by being a homeless, hatemongering, drug-addicted assholecunt.
    • 2007, Elazar Barkan, Elizabeth A. Cole, Kai Struve,Shared History, Divided Memory, page287:
      Vinokur pulled the trigger a second and third time. "You're lying, you Polishcunt!" he screamed.
    • 2009 November 12, Patrick Barkham, “Top Gear: Why We're Mad About the Boys”, inThe Guardian:
      He rails against political correctness and health and safety regulations, and earlier this summer was accused of calling Gordon Brown "acunt" in unbroadcast comments to his Top Gear audience, whom he has also referred to as "oafs".
  3. (UK, Ireland, Commonwealth, countable) Anobjectionable object or item.
    Fix the car? I’ll sort thecunt out at the weekend.
  4. (Ireland, UK, Commonwealth, countable) Anunpleasant ordifficult experience or incident.
    • 1980,Stephen King,The Mist, Viking Press:
      The lines were up past the frozen food now; people had to cut through to get what they wanted and there was much excuse-me-ing and pardon-me-ing. “This is going to be acunt,” Norton said morosely, and I frowned a little.
    • 2016 July 11, Rachel Braier,The Guardian:
      Certain situations just cry out for it – keys breaking in the lock, not being able to find the starting point in a roll of sticky-tape, running out of bin-bags. The kind of everyday annoyances that Alanis Morissette would define as irony are actuallycunts as far as I’m concerned.
  5. (synecdochic, countable and uncountable) Awoman or any receptive sexual partner, as a source of potential or actual sexual gratification.
    I'm going to hit the clubs and see if I can get me somecunt.
  6. (Ireland, UK, Commonwealth, positive, countable; with wordsfunny,good) A person (mostly between male friends); comparebastard.
    Yes, I do remember Dave; he was onefunny cunt.
    Tom's agood cunt: he fixed my car and didn't even charge me for it!
  7. (transgenderslang) Theanus of atrans woman.
  8. (transgenderslang, usually in theplural) Theinguinal canals of atrans woman.

Usage notes

  • Writing in 1961, Partridge notes the term had been avoided "in written and polite spoken English" since the 15th century and had been considered obscene since around 1700. Partridge further notes the term's absence from the 1932Universal Dictionary of English and the 1933Shorter Oxford Dictionary, and he himselfbowdlerizes it asc*nt.
  • In many English-speaking countries, "cunt" is considered to be the most offensiveswear word: a study by several British broadcasting organizations found that it was the most offensive swear word, with 96% classing it as severe;[1] a similar study by New Zealand'sBroadcasting Standards Authority found that it was the most offensive word there, offending 74% of New Zealanders.[2]
  • In the US, wherecunt is most often used as an insult towards women, the word is also likely to be taken as amisogynisticslur and its use can cause controversy even in contexts where vulgar language is otherwise acceptable. In the US in the 21st centurynigger andcunt are widely ranked as the most offensive words in the language. In Commonwealth countries, the word – although still considered offensive – is not generally interpreted as misogynistic or indicating specific hatred towards women.[3]

Quotations

Synonyms

Derived terms

Translations

genitalia
unpleasant or objectionable person
The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions atWiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Translations to be checked

Verb

cunt (third-person singular simple presentcunts,present participlecunting,simple past and past participlecunted)

  1. (generally vulgar) To use the word "cunt".
    • 2007, Robert Minhinnick,Sea Holly, Seren Books:
      [...] and boy I can hear every word from behind my tree because that plot of hers is close to the road and she's fucking it and she'scunting it and you never heard a woman talking like that, not sober anyway[...]
    • 2016 September 27, Peter Stothard,The Senecans: Four Men and Margaret Thatcher, Abrams,→ISBN:
      Anyone whom he told to piss off was grateful not to have beencunted instead.
    • 2017 September 21, Chris Heath, quotingRobbie Williams,Reveal: Robbie Williams - As close as you can get to the man behind the Netflix Documentary, Bonnier Publishing Ltd.,→ISBN:
      I wanted to provoke something in him so that he would hit me first, so I went over andcunted him off left , right and centre . He was a Scouser - I called him a Scouse cunt.
  2. (vulgar) To attack someone.
    • 2009 September 23, Peter Bradshaw, “The irony about Nick Love's Outlaw DVD commentary”, inThe Guardian[3]:
      Clint Eastwood's Dirty Harry was indeed described as "fascist", notably by Pauline Kael, although there is no real evidence that Scorsese's Taxi Driver was "cunted" on first release – on the contrary, despite continuing misgivings about violence, that film was surely widely praised from the very first, getting the Palme d'Or at Cannes.
    • 2022 October 28, Gregory Ashe,A Fault against the Dead, Hodgkin and Blount,→ISBN:
      “I wanted him to leave me alone,” Baby said. “I wasn't actually going to, you know.”
      Cunt him?” Theo said. Baby flinched.
  3. (vulgar) To ruin something; tofuck up.
    • 2015 September 17, Charles Higson,King Of The Ants, Hachette UK,→ISBN:
      ... 'We were going to. Duke gave you the ticket, it was all set. And then youcunted the whole plan, didn't you? You killed the bastard.'
    • 2018 July 10, Keith Gessen,A Terrible Country: A Novel, Penguin,→ISBN:
      “If I'd said things in Russia werecunted, that would mean bad.”
  4. (vulgar) To betray someone.
    • 2005, Darren Murphy,Tabloid Caligula, Oberon Books:
      JOE : Youcunted me.
      ROBERT : Language . Not in here .
      JOE : You lied .
    • 2010 April 3, Richard Perilly,Villains, Lulu.com,→ISBN, page189:
      Youcunted us, and I'm gonna make you pay, cos you shit on us Pete.
    • 2017 February 4, Alex Clark, “I'm no pussy when it comes to swearing”, inThe Guardian[4]:
      One of my favourite ever instances of its deployment was at a particularly troublesome roundabout, when a driver of my acquaintance uttered the deathless phrase: “Right: it’scunt or becunted.”
  5. (vulgar) To take something into one's vulva or vagina.
    • 1977, John Harris,Against the Day of the Dead:
      How shecunts his finger as if it were a close friend
    • 1998, Evan Dara,The Lost Scrapbook, University of Alabama Press,→ISBN, page230:
      I am pushing towards him, against him, yearning to open up against his entire face, tocunt him entirely, to feel the full warm liquid merging

Adjective

cunt (notcomparable)

  1. (LGBTQslang, vulgar) Amazing or very good.
    • [2022, Lauron J. Kehrer,Queer Voices in Hip Hop: Cultures, Communities, and Contemporary Performance, page59:
      As noted above, "cunt" or "cunty" has evolved in Ballroom parlance to mean exactly whatBanks defines it as: feminine and strong.]
    • 2022 December 29, PeachyPlumz (on reddit), in "Symmetra is a ‘gay icon’?",Reddit:
      Look at her like how can you not saycunt[,] she'scunt
    • 2023 May 24, cutehammie (on reddit), in "Trans ally Azealia", r/popheadscirclejerk,Reddit:
      she's soCUNT ... like... how can i not say cunt???

References

  1. ^“"Delete expletives?"”, in(Please provide the book title or journal name)[1], 19 February 2015 (last accessed), archived fromthe original on24 September 2015
  2. ^What Not to Swear
  3. ^Jo Livingstone (5 June 2018), “What’s So Bad About the C-Word?”, inNew Republic[2]

Anagrams

Middle English

Noun

cunt

  1. alternative form ofcunte

Old Dutch

Etymology

FromProto-Germanic*kunþaz.

Adjective

cunt

  1. known,familiar

Inflection

Declension ofcunt (a-stem)
strong declension
casemasculinefeminineneuterplural
nominativecuntcuntcuntcunda,cunde
accusativecundan,cundencundacuntcunda,cunde
genitivecundescunderocundescundero
dativecundin,cundemocunderocundin,cundemocundon
weak declension
casemasculinefeminineneuterplural
nominativecundocundacundacundon
accusativecundoncundoncundacundon
genitivecundincundoncundincundono
dativecundincundoncundincundon

Derived terms

Descendants

Further reading

  • kunt”, inOudnederlands Woordenboek,2012
Retrieved from "https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=cunt&oldid=89551427"
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