Defecate
41Hang a bog — defecate (18th C. British slang; ultimate origin uncertain) …
42relieve bowels — defecate, have a bowel movement …
43defecation — defecate ► VERB ▪ discharge faeces from the body. DERIVATIVES defecation noun defecatory adjective. ORIGIN Latin defaecare, from faex dregs …
44defecatory — defecate ► VERB ▪ discharge faeces from the body. DERIVATIVES defecation noun defecatory adjective. ORIGIN Latin defaecare, from faex dregs …
45Housebreaking — This article is about animal training; for the crime of housebreaking, see burglary.Housebreaking is the process of training a domesticated animal that lives with its human owners in a house to eliminate (urinate and defecate) outdoors, or in a… …
46dher-5, dhrei-d- — dher 5, dhrei d English meaning: to defecate Deutsche Übersetzung: “Unrat, cacüre” Note: (whether related to dher 1 “muddy residuum “ and dher 4?) Material: Lat. foria pl. “diarrhea” (by Varro of pigs), foriō, īre “defecate”; …
47Shit — This article is about the word shit . For the waste product, see feces. For the egestion of bodily wastes, see defecation. For the Indian film, see Amudhan R P. Scheiße redirects here. For the Lady Gaga song, see Scheiße (song). Shit is usually… …
48shit — I. noun Etymology: Middle English *shit, from Old English scite; akin to Old English scītan to defecate Date: circa 1526 1. usually vulgar feces 2. usually vulgar an act of defecation 3. usually vulgar nonsense …
49kakka- — Also kaka . To defecate. Root imitative of glottal closure during defecation. 1. cucking stool, from Middle English cukken, to defecate, from a source akin to Old Norse *kūka, to defecate. 2. poppycock, from Latin cacāre, to defecate. 3. caco ; …
50skei- — To cut, split. Extension of sek . Derivatives include science, nice, shit, schism, sheath, ski, and esquire. 1. a. shin1, from Old English scinu …