puke
/pjuːk/
puke
English
Noun Top 7,513
American (Lessac)
(medium)
Female
0.4s
American (Amy)
(medium)
Female
0.6s
American (Ryan)
(medium)
Male
0.2s
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Definition
vomit.
Etymology
Probably imitative; or, alternatively from Proto-Germanic *pukaną (“to spit, puff”), from Proto-Indo-European *bew- (“to blow, swell”). If so, then cognate with German pfauchen, fauchen (“to hiss, spit”). Compare also Dutch spugen (“to spit, spit up”), German spucken (“to spit, puke, throw up”), Old English spīwan (“to vomit, spit”). More at spew. Attested as early as 1581, first mention is the derivative pukishness (“the tendency to be sick frequently”). In 1600, "to spit up, regurgitate", recorded in the Seven Ages of Man speech in Shakespeare's As You Like It.
Example Sentences
- "2007, The Guardian, The Guardian Science blog, "The latest in the war on terror: the puke saber" the puke saber … pulses light over rapidly changing wavelengths, apparently inducing "disorientation, nausea and even vomiting""
- ""at 8 a.m. took a puke of vinum antimoniale; which operated very kindly; was very weak the remainder of the day.""
- ""Pukes" and "suckers" had badly mauled the Saints, the first pummeling them from Missouri and the second from Illinois."
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