different between cuck vs wittol

cuck

English

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /k?k/
  • Rhymes: -?k
  • enPR: k?k, IPA(key): /k?k/

Etymology 1

Clipping of cuckold. The sense of weakling, race traitor, etc. apparently originated on 4chan in 2014 and migrated to Reddit soon after.

Noun

cuck (plural cucks)

  1. (slang) A cuckold.
    • 1706, Edward Ward, Hudibras redivivus, I.10:
      Not the Horn-Plague, but something worse, Had drove the frighted Cucks from thence.
    • 2015, Filipa Jodelka, The Guardian, 17 August:
      We bounce from Bisset and Seymour’s increasingly happy shagging to Worsley, the willing cuck, watching on and, finally, the trial that Worsley brings against Bisset.
  2. (derogatory, slang) A weakling.
    • 2016, Kumail Nanjiani, quoted in The Guardian, 12 November:
      “He starts getting in my face. Thomas puts his hand on the dude’s chest to stop him. ‘Don’t touch me you cuck. Wanna go outside?’”
    • 2020, "TDO" quoted by Vinny Troia in Hunting Cyber Criminals[1]:
      You're site is SHITE. It gets hacked DAILY. You dumb cuck.
  3. (derogatory, slang) One who acts against one's own interests, or that of one's own race, gender, class, religion, etc.
Related terms
  • cuckservative

Verb

cuck (third-person singular simple present cucks, present participle cucking, simple past and past participle cucked)

  1. (slang, transitive) To cuckold, to be sexually unfaithful towards.
  2. (slang, transitive, derogatory) To weaken or emasculate.
  3. (slang, transitive, derogatory) To fool and thus lower the status of, to exploit the trust or tolerance of (to one's own benefit and the other's disadvantage); to make into a cuck (one who acts against their own interests).
    • 2016 May 18, Milo Yiannopoulos, "Cucked by Zuck":
      It’s redolent of the way establishment conservatives lost the culture war in the first place, by bowing to the opposition, allowing others to play them for fools, and contenting themselves with the occasional scraps thrown to them by progressive elites. I said “cucked by Zuck” earlier, but in reality, they were cucked a long time ago and by their enemies in the Democratic Party and liberal media.

Etymology 2

Back-formation from cucking stool.

Verb

cuck (third-person singular simple present cucks, present participle cucking, simple past and past participle cucked)

  1. (obsolete, transitive) To punish (someone) by putting them in a cucking stool.
    • 1611, Thomas Middleton and Thomas Dekker, The Roaring Girle:
      Follow the law, and you can cucke mee, spare not.

References


Yola

Etymology

From Middle English cok, from Old English cocc, from Proto-West Germanic *kokk.

Noun

cuck

  1. cock (rooster)

References

  • Jacob Poole (1867) , William Barnes, editor, A glossary, with some pieces of verse, of the old dialect of the English colony in the baronies of Forth and Bargy, County of Wexford, Ireland, J. Russell Smith, ?ISBN

cuck From the web:



wittol

English

Etymology

From Middle English witewold; likely a blend of witen (to know) + cockewold (cuckold), equivalent to wit +? cuckold.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?w?t?l/

Homophone: whittle

Noun

wittol (plural wittols)

  1. (archaic) A man who knows and tolerates his wife's infidelity with another man or men; a cuckold.
    • , New York Review of Books 2001, p.67:
      To see [] a wittol wink at his wife's honesty, and too perspicuous in all other affairs […].
    • 1885, Sir Richard Francis Burton, The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night, "Night 13"
      So the Ifrit cried at her, "Thou whorest and makest me a wittol with thine eyes;" and struck her so that her head went flying.
    • 1960, John Barth, The Sot-Weed Factor
      God help the husband that obliges his wife's least whim: he'll be a wittol ere he's two years wed!
  2. (Britain, dialect, obsolete) A bird, the wheatear.

Translations

See also

  • cuckold
  • cuckquean
  • mari complaisant

Anagrams

  • Titlow

wittol From the web:

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