亚洲网紅露点

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swive

[ swahyv ]

verb (used with object)

swived, swiving.
  1. to copulate with.


verb (used without object)

swived, swiving.
  1. to copulate.

swive

/ 蝉飞补瑟惫 /

verb

  1. archaic.
    to have sexual intercourse with (a person)
鈥淐ollins English Dictionary 鈥 Complete & Unabridged鈥 2012 Digital Edition 漏 William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 漏 HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins

Origin of swive1

1350鈥1400; Middle English swiven; apparently special use of Old English 蝉飞墨蹿补苍 to move, wend, sweep; swift, swivel
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亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins

Origin of swive1

Old English 蝉飞墨蹿补苍 to revolve, swivel
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

In Shakespeare鈥檚 day the equivalent term was 鈥渟wive,鈥 which was far stronger.

From

Fritz, the hero, is what the average campus revolutionary was in the late '60s锟絘 fool tabby, living off vicarious experience, with his head full of windy sub-Marcusian rhetoric and only one ambition: to swive.

Salacious Tavern and ye taverner-host, From Pileate Brothers the ninth pile-post, D'ye claim, you only of the mentule boast, D'ye claim alone what damsels be the best 5To swive: as he-goats holding all the rest?

From

Quoth Mehmoud, 'I will give thee neither mule nor clothes nor merchandise save at this price; for I am mad for love of thee, and God bless him who said: Abou Bilal his saw of an object of love, Which from one of his 聽聽聽聽聽elders himself did derive "The lover's not healed of the pangs of desire By clips nor by 聽聽聽聽聽kisses, excepting he swive."

From

And an eighth: She proffered me a tender kaze; But I, "I will not swive," 聽聽聽聽聽replied.

From

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