The Dirtiest Words . . . That Aren’t

Tittle titivation

Pull your minds out of the gutter for this show! Titivate is “to make smart or spruce,” and tittle rhymes with little for a reason; it’s “a tiny amount of something.” It’s also—adorably—the term for that tiny dot above a lower-case i. So, here’s a tittle brain-titivating list dedicated to words that sound uncannily like their steamy friends but have nothing to do with the pleasures of the flesh. Ready to titivate yourself? Want to see these not-so-dirty words as you read along? Watch our Dirty Words video below.

WATCH: The Dirtiest Words ... That Aren’t

Masticate & Macerate

You’ll be using your mouth and hands for other scrumptious pleasures when you masticate macerated fruit.

Masticate is another way to say “chew,” and macerate is a process of softening food in a soaking liquid. Macerated berries sweetened with a tittle sugar are delicious on pound cake. Nobody said mastication has to be moan-free.

Copula & Cupulate

These words are so close to copulating, it’s almost a shame. But, copula has a crucial role in linguistics as a linking verb, connecting subjects in a sentence to their complements (so it does have to do with joining together after all). Forms of the verb to be are copula, and where would we be without them?

Cupulate is another way to say “cup-like,” and it is often used in botany, as in “the cupulate shape of the liverwort’s thallus.” A thallus—not to be confused with phallus—is basically a blobby plant lacking stems, leaves, and roots.

Succulometer

This seems like it’d be a great term to describe suction power (in an “oh yeah” kind of way), or maybe to describe a device that determines how horrible a situation is.

However, the succulometer is an instrument that measures a vegetable’s moisture content. A succulent ear of summer corn scores high on the succulometer.

Penetrance

Isn’t it wild how powerful a single sound can be in a word? Here the r makes all the difference between spiritual sorrow (penitence) and salaciousness. Actually, penetrance is a genetic term relating to how a particular gene is expressed. Much less penetrating than we thought.

Vagitus

Originating from the Latin vagire (“to wail”), vagitus is a newborn’s first cry. Come to think of it, the little wails from newborns do generally occur in close proximity to you-know-what. (Yeah, we do feel a little silly speaking of the vagina like we’re talking about Lord Voldemort. Sorry about that.)

Pusillanimous

Pusillanimous is most likely the derivation of one of the definitions of pussy (as in wimpy though).

A pusillanimous person lacks courage. The word traces back to the 1580s and is a compound of pusill(us), “very small or petty,” and anim(is), “-spirited” or “-minded.” A very small-minded person with a cowardly spirit then, sounds like a winner.

Futtock

This one will be quick to deflate your sails, because a futtock is a curved timber piece of a ship’s frame.

Carnificial

Oh, the carnificial pleasures of life! That’s not something you’d want people to hear you say. Butchers and executioners might be familiar with the term because this adjective is in reference to them, as in “a carnifical knife used to hack meat.” But even then, why?

Probably the only person who gets any kind of pleasure out of carnificial stuff is Hannibal Lecter. Next!

Erotetic

Erotetic is a very erudite adjective used in rhetoric and linguistics to denote subject matter pertaining to interrogatives, like rhetorical questions. Who knew?

Diptych

Diptych is our nod to South Park’s (always off-color) joke about “fishsticks,” although ours doesn’t imply homosexuality (Google “south park fishsticks” if you’re confused).

We won’t paint a picture of how raunchy diptych can get. Instead, we’ll take you to the late 1300s, a time when one of the first diptych paintings was produced. In art, diptychs are composed of two painted or carved surfaces that have been hinged together (after the Greek diptikus, “folded together”). Diptychs were also hinged wax-covered surfaces for writing.

Manal & Uranic

Pronounced with a forward “ay” sound, manal and uranic sure sound like we’re dealing with some a-holes.

In English, manal is an adjective describing the hand or relating to hand-like entities. Uranic means “of the palate,” another set of bony and muscular structures located in a different orifice altogether.

Sextile

Sextile is an astronomy word pertaining to the position of two heavenly bodies 60 degrees apart from each other. The term dates to the 1550s and is derived from the Latin sextus (“sixth”), which was also a proper name for the sixth child born to a family.

In a rather titillating tangent, a sextile position in astrology is favorable for mental stimulation.

Invaginate

To invaginate means “to put into a sheath.” And yes, invaginate leads us back to the original meaning of vagina as “a sheath” or some sort of enveloping structure.

So, a sword is both metaphorically and physically invaginated. On the other hand, a person can look amazing while invaginated in a summery sheath dress. And for that matter, everyone invaginates themselves into pants. Think about that. Or, don’t.

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Word of the Day

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whippersnapper

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Can you guess the definition?

Word of the day
whippersnapper

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