coitize
English
Etymology
From coitus (“sexual intercourse”), from Latin coitus, + -ize
Verb
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- To sexually penetrate.
- 1948, Journal of Clinical and Experimental Psychopathology & Quarterly Review of Psychiatry and Neurology, Volume 9[1] (Psychiatry), page 443:
- She attempts to get on top of smaller boys and pretends to coitize them, in a manner which is forbidden to "good women", ...
- 1959, Journal of the Hillside Hospital, Volume 8[2], Digitized edition (Psychiatry), published 2009, page 272:
- "Will you all allow me to coitize you? Now, traditionally, the man is viewed as the coitizer and the woman as the coitized one.