different between sucker vs scolex

sucker

English

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?s?k.?/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /?s?k.?/
  • (General Australian)
  • Rhymes: -?k?(r)
  • Homophone: succor

Etymology 1

From Middle English souker, sokere, sukkere, soukere, equivalent to suck (verb) +? -er. Compare Saterland Frisian Suuger, West Frisian sûker (sucker), Dutch zuiger (sucker), German Sauger (dummy; vacuum).

Noun

sucker (plural suckers)

  1. A person or animal that sucks, especially a breast or udder; especially a suckling animal, young mammal before it is weaned. [from late 14th century]
  2. (horticulture) An undesired stem growing out of the roots or lower trunk of a shrub or tree, especially from the rootstock of a grafted plant or tree. [from 1570s]
  3. (by extension) A parasite; a sponger.
    Synonyms: see Thesaurus:scrounger
  4. An organ or body part that does the sucking; especially a round structure on the bodies of some insects, frogs, and octopuses that allows them to stick to surfaces.
  5. A thing that works by sucking something.
  6. The embolus, or bucket, of a pump; also, the valve of a pump basket.
  7. A pipe through which anything is drawn.
  8. A small piece of leather, usually round, having a string attached to the center, which, when saturated with water and pressed upon a stone or other body having a smooth surface, adheres, by reason of the atmospheric pressure, with such force as to enable a considerable weight to be thus lifted by the string; formerly used by children as a plaything.
  9. (Britain, colloquial) A suction cup.
  10. An animal such as the octopus and remora, which adhere to other bodies with such organs.
  11. (zoology) Any fish in the family Catostomidae of North America and eastern Asia, which have mouths modified into downward-pointing, suckerlike structures for feeding in bottom sediments. [from 1750s]
  12. (US, informal) A lollipop; a piece of candy which is sucked. [from 1820s]
  13. (slang, archaic) A hard drinker.
    Synonyms: soaker, suck-pint; see also Thesaurus:drunkard
  14. (US, obsolete) An inhabitant of Illinois.
    Synonym: Illinoisian
  15. (US, obsolete) A migrant lead miner working in the Driftless Area of northwest Illinois, southwest Wisconsin, and northeast Iowa, working in summer and leaving for winter, so named because of the similarity to the migratory patterns of the North American Catostomidae.
  16. (US, slang) A person who is easily deceived, tricked or persuaded to do something; a naive person. [from 1830s]
    Synonyms: chump, fall guy, fish, fool, gull, mark, mug, patsy, rube, schlemiel, soft touch; see also Thesaurus:dupe
  17. (informal) A person irresistibly attracted by something specified.
  18. (obsolete, vulgar, British slang) The penis.
    Synonyms: see Thesaurus:penis
Holonyms
  • suckerdom
Translations

Verb

sucker (third-person singular simple present suckers, present participle suckering, simple past and past participle suckered)

  1. (horticulture, transitive) To strip the suckers or shoots from; to deprive of suckers.
    to sucker maize
  2. (horticulture, intransitive) To produce suckers, to throw up additional stems or shoots.
  3. (intransitive) To move or attach itself by means of suckers.
    • 1961, Olympia (issues 1-4, page 83)
      I am now the octopus, mucus, held together by soft moist membrane, suckering everywhere.
    • 2017, Elizabeth Hand, Bradford Morrow, Other Aliens
      He paused at the octopus tank. Clyde, our resident giant Pacific octopus, was suckering his way across the front panel.
    • 2018, TW Neal, Freckled: A Memoir of Growing up Wild in Hawaii
      I hold the octopus around the middle, suckering and so heavy, trying to crawl down my belly and legs to get away. I run to shore, trying to keep the tentacles off me, but it's too big and strong.
  4. (transitive, informal) To fool someone; to take advantage of someone.
    The salesman suckered him into signing an expensive maintenance contract.
Translations

Etymology 2

Possibly from German Sache (thing).

Noun

sucker (plural suckers)

  1. (slang, emphatic) Any thing or object.
    • 1975, Frank Zappa, "San Ber'dino":
      She's in love with a boy from the rodeo who pulls the rope on the chute when they let those suckers go.
    • 1984, Runaway (film): scene in a helicopter, around 5 min 20 sec
      RAMSAY: Dave, can you land this sucker?
    See if you can get that sucker working again.
  2. (slang, derogatory) A person.
    • 2009, Stephen Hunter, The Day Before Midnight: A Novel, Bantam (?ISBN), page 232:
      You got to hit that sucker and hit him over and over. You got to hope he runs out ...
    • 2016, John Sandford, Extreme Prey, Prey (?ISBN), page 244:
      Maybe you hit that sucker and we'll get some DNA ...
Usage notes

Usually preceded by a demonstrative adjective (this, that, these, those).

Synonyms
  • (thing or object): thing, object

See also

  • sucker on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Anagrams

  • Uckers

sucker From the web:



scolex

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Ancient Greek ?????? (sk?l?x, worm).

Noun

scolex (plural scolices or scoleces or scolexes)

  1. (zoology) The structure at the front end of a tapeworm which, in the adult, has suckers and hooks by which it attaches itself to a host.
    • 1859 Robert Bentley Todd - The Cyclopædia of Anatomy and Physiology
      The head, with the circle of hooklets and the four suckers, is then formed at the anterior part of the embryo, constituting now the scolex of Van Beneden.

Romanian

Etymology

From French scolex.

Noun

scolex n (plural scolexuri)

  1. scolex

Declension

scolex From the web:

  • what is scolex of taenia
  • what does scolex mean
  • what does scolex do
  • tapeworm scolex
  • what is scolex used for
  • what is scolex in biology
  • what causes scolex
  • what does scolex
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