English

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Learned borrowing from Latin cum (with).

Pronunciation

edit

Preposition

edit

cum

  1. Used in indicating a thing or person which has two or more roles, functions, or natures, or which has changed from one to another.
    He built a bus-cum-greenhouse that made a bold statement, but the plants in it didn't live very long.
    But instead of being a salesperson cum barista cum waitress merely serving the wordsmiths, I'm one of them, reading her latest baby out loud.
    • 1926-1950, George Bernard Shaw, Collected Letters: 1926-1950[1], University of California/Viking, published 1985, page 31:
      He is too good an actor to need that sort of tomfoolery: the effect will be far better if he is a credible mining camp elder-cum-publican.
    • 1944 May and June, “Notes and News: The Snailbeach District Railway”, in Railway Magazine, page 183:
      One driver-cum-fireman-cum-fitter looks after the three locomotives, [...].
    • 2001 Nov/Dec, David Sachs, “LET THEM EAT BITS”, in American Spectator, volume 34, number 8, page 78:
      The banner shows a yellowed silhouette of a boy (possibly Calvin, of Calvin & Hobbes) urinating on an EU flag. Sites such as this show the full power of the Internet as a propaganda medium cum travel service cum organizing tool. Oh, and nightlife directory.
    • 2023 February 5, Kathryn Parsons, “Boom times are back in San Francisco’s tech mecca”, in The Sunday Times[2]:
      Coffee shops-cum-meeting-spots dotted across the city are teeming (Equator, Blue Bottle and Saint Frank). Caffeine-fuelled, lactose-intolerant, macadamia milk latte-drinking young folk are journalling, manifesting, coding, ChatGPT-ing and pitching their ideas.
    • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:cum.
Usage notes
edit

Also used in some British place names and civil parish names, see table below

Translations
edit

Etymology 2

edit

Variant of come, attested (in the basic sense "come, move from further to nearer, arrive") since Old English. The sexual sense of come is attested since the 1650s. In this sense and spelling, attested from 1970s.[4]

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

cum (uncountable)

  1. (colloquial, often vulgar) Semen.
    Synonyms: jizz, (chiefly UK) spunk, (US) spooge, nut, skeet, junk; see also Thesaurus:semen
    • 1977, John Rechy, The Sexual Outlaw, New York: Dell, →ISBN, page 73:
      Jim descends into the murky tunnel; the faint odor of cum permeates the air.
    • 1989 December 24, Read Weaver, “Queers For Years”, in Gay Community News, volume 17, number 24, page 9:
      Licking a friend's cum off another friend's belly.
    • 2014, Norm Macdonald Live, season 2, episode 3, spoken by Norm Macdonald:
      This week I learned that cum tastes like nickels.
  2. (colloquial, often vulgar) Female ejaculatory discharge.
  3. (colloquial, often vulgar) An ejaculation.
Derived terms
edit
Translations
edit
The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.

Verb

edit

cum (third-person singular simple present cums, present participle cumming, simple past came or (nonstandard) cummed, past participle come or cum or (nonstandard) cummed)

  1. (slang, often vulgar) To have an orgasm, to feel the sensation of an orgasm.
    Synonym: climax
    (Can we add an example for this sense?)
  2. (slang, often vulgar) To ejaculate.
    Synonyms: see Thesaurus:ejaculate
    • 1997 July 14, “Visits, Conjugal, and Otherwise”, in Oz, season 1, episode 2, spoken by Augustus Hill (Harold Perrineau):
      I got no sensation down there, so I don't know when I'm hard, I don't know when I cum. My wife's gotta tell me.
    • 2019, “All Humans Too Late”, in The Book of Traps and Lessons, performed by Kae Tempest:
      Sucking on pork ribs and summoning pornography / So that we can cum when we fuck / Our partners don’t know us / Our families are strangers
  3. Eye dialect spelling of come (move from further to nearer; arrive).
    • 1882, William Makepeace Thayer, From Log-Cabin to White House, page 162:
      “Where'd he cum from?” the bowman inquired. “That's what we'd like ter know, yer see; where he cum from, and how he happen'd to cum,” responded the steersman. “But he's a jolly good feller, strong as a lion, []
Usage notes
edit

Many style guides and editors recommend the spelling come for verb uses (to orgasm/to ejaculate) while strictly allowing the spelling cum for the noun (semen/female ejaculatory discharge). Both spellings are sometimes found in either the noun or verb sense, however. Others prefer to distinguish in formality, using come for any formal usage and cum only in slang, erotic or pornographic contexts.[5]

The past tense and past participle variant cummed is used when the verb is felt as a denominal from the noun rather than a specialized sense of the verb come.

Translations
edit

Etymology 3

edit

Adjective

edit

cum (not comparable)

  1. Clipping of cumulative.

Etymology 4

edit

Noun

edit

cum (uncountable)

  1. Abbreviation of cubic metre.
    The density of cement is 1440 kg/cum.

References

edit
  1. 1.0 1.1 cum”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
  2. 2.0 2.1 cum”, in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
  3. 3.0 3.1 cum”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.
  4. ^ Douglas Harper (2001–2024) “cum”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.
  5. ^ Glossophilia

Anagrams

edit

Aromanian

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

From Vulgar Latin *quomo, from Latin quōmodo.

Adverb

edit

cum

  1. how

Conjunction

edit

cum

  1. how

Eastern Cham

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Verb

edit

cum

  1. to kiss
  2. to smell (something)

Galician

edit

Noun

edit

cum m (feminine cumha or cuma, masculine plural cums, feminine plural cumhas or cumas)

  1. reintegrationist spelling of cun

References

edit
  • cum” in Dicionário Estraviz de galego (2014).

Irish

edit

Etymology

edit

From Old Irish cummaid (fashions, shapes, composes, determines; makes, creates, devises), from cummae (act of cutting, carving, hacking, destroying, butchering; act of shaping, fashioning, composing; shape, form, appearance) (compare modern cuma).

Pronunciation

edit

Verb

edit

cum (present analytic cumann, future analytic cumfaidh, verbal noun cumadh, past participle cumtha) (transitive, intransitive)

  1. to form (give shape)
  2. to compose (construct by mental labor; to think up)
  3. to invent, make up, coin
  4. to concoct (contrive something using skill or ingenuity)
  5. to manufacture, fabricate (a story, excuse etc.)

Inflection

edit

Mutation

edit
Mutated forms of cum
radical lenition eclipsis
cum chum gcum

Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Modern Irish.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

Further reading

edit

Latin

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Pronunciation

edit

Etymology 1

edit

    From Old Latin com, from Proto-Italic *kom, from Proto-Indo-European *ḱóm (next to, at, with, along). Cognate with Proto-Germanic *ga- (co-), Proto-Slavic *sъ(n) (with).

    The ablative is from the PIE comitative-instrumental.

    Preposition

    edit

    cum (+ ablative)

    1. with, along with
      Titus cum familiā habitat.Titus lives with his family.
      magnā cum laudewith great praise
    2. at (denoting a point in time with which an action coincides)
      Mīlitēs cum prīmā lūce vēnērunt.The soldiers came at day-break.
    3. -fold (with ordinal number)
      cum centesimo efficereto yield a hundredfold
    Derived terms
    edit
    Descendants
    edit
    • English: cum
    • Aragonese: con
    • Aromanian: cu
    • Asturian: con, cun, co
    • Corsican: , cun
    • Dalmatian: con
    • Emilian: con
    • Friulian: cun, cu
    • Istriot: cun, cu'
    • Italian: con
    • Ladin: con, co, cun
    • Ligurian: con
    • Lombard: cond
    • Megleno-Romanian: cu
    • Mirandese: cun
    • Neapolitan: cu
    • Old Galician-Portuguese: con
      • Fala: con
      • Galician: con
      • Portuguese: com (see there for further descendants)
    • Piedmontese: cun
    • Romagnol: cun
    • Romanian: cu
    • Leonese: cun
    • Romansch: cun
    • Sardinian: chin, cun
    • Sicilian: cu
    • Spanish: con
    • Venetan: co

    Etymology 2

    edit

    From Old Latin quom, from Proto-Indo-European *kʷóm, accusative of *kʷos, *kʷis. Compare its feminine form quam (as in tum-tam).

    Alternative forms

    edit

    Conjunction

    edit

    cum

    1. [with subjunctive]
      1. (causal) when, after [with imperfect subjunctive or pluperfect subjunctive]
      2. because, since
      3. although
    2. [with indicative]
      1. (temporal) when, while [with present indicative or perfect indicative]
    Usage notes
    edit
    • In the sense of when, if there is no causal link between the verb in the dependent clause and the verb in the main clause (sometimes called an inverted cum-clause, as the 'main action' of the sentence occurs in the dependent clause), the indicative is used rather than the subjunctive.
      Per viam ambulābāmus cum pugnam vīdimus. [not *vīderīmus]
      We were walking through the street when we saw a fight.
    • Often coupled with tum, such that tum X, cum Y means "then X, when Y", and cum X tum Y means "not only X but also Y".
      27 BCE – 25 BCE, Titus Livius, Ab Urbe Condita I.13:
      movet res cum multitudinem tum duces
      This event not only shocked the crowd but also the commanders
    Coordinate terms
    edit
    Derived terms
    edit

    References

    edit
    • (preposition)cum”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
    • (conjunction)cum”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
    • cum”, in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
    • cum in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition with additions by D. P. Carpenterius, Adelungius and others, edited by Léopold Favre, 1883–1887)
    • cum in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette.
    • Carl Meißner, Henry William Auden (1894) Latin Phrase-Book[3], London: Macmillan and Co.
      • a storm accompanied by heavy claps of thunder: tempestas cum magno fragore (caeli) tonitribusque (Liv. 1. 16)
      • to have the same boundaries; to be coterminous: continentem esse terrae or cum terra (Fam. 15. 2. 2)
      • at the same moment that, precisely when: eo ipso tempore, cum; tum ipsum, cum
      • occasions arise for..: incidunt tempora, cum
      • I have not seen you for five years: quinque anni sunt or sextus annus est, cum te non vidi
      • to live to see the day when..: diem videre, cum...
      • with many tears: multis cum lacrimis
      • with many tears: magno cum fletu
      • so-and-so is in a very satisfactory position; prospers: agitur praeclare, bene cum aliquo
      • under such circumstances: quae cum ita sint
      • to struggle with adversity: conflictari (cum) adversa fortuna
      • to balance a loss by anything: damnum compensare cum aliqua re
      • to form a friendship with any one: amicitiam cum aliquo jungere, facere, inire, contrahere
      • I am on good terms with a person: est or intercedit mihi cum aliquo amicitia
      • I am on bad terms with a person: sunt or intercedunt mihi cum aliquo inimicitiae
      • to be bound by the closest ties of friendship: artissimo amicitiae vinculo or summa familiaritate cum aliquo coniunctum esse
      • to be at enmity with a man: inimicitias gerere, habere, exercere cum aliquo
      • to make a person one's enemy: inimicitias cum aliquo suscipere
      • to reconcile two people; to be a mediator: in gratiam aliquem cum aliquo reducere
      • to be reconciled; to make up a quarrel: in gratiam cum aliquo redire
      • to expostulate with a person about a thing: conqueri, expostulare cum aliquo de aliqua re
      • I heard him say..: ex eo audivi, cum diceret
      • to confuse true with false: vera cum falsis confundere
      • to imbibe error from one's mother's breasts: errorem cum lacte nutricis sugere (Tusc. 3. 1. 2)
      • (1) to communicate one's plans to some one; (2) to make common cause with a person. Similarly c. causam, rationem: consilia cum aliquo communicare
      • to think over, consider a thing: secum (cum animo) reputare aliquid
      • to think over, consider a thing: considerare in, cum animo, secum aliquid
      • to enjoy close intercourse with... (of master and pupil): multum esse cum aliquo (Fam. 16. 21)
      • to be closely connected with a thing: cohaerere, coniunctum esse cum aliqua re
      • to maintain a controversy with some one: controversiam (contentionem) habere cum aliquo
      • to come to an understanding with a person: transigere aliquid cum aliquo
      • to agree with a person: consentire, idem sentire cum aliquo
      • to disagree with a person: dissentire, dissidere ab or cum aliquo
      • to be united by having a common language: eiusdem linguae societate coniunctum esse cum aliquo (De Or. 3. 59. 223)
      • to hold an altercation with a man: verbis concertare or altercari cum aliquo (B. C. 3. 19. 6)
      • to correspond with some one: colloqui cum aliquo per litteras
      • to my sorrow: cum magno meo dolore
      • my relations with him are most hospitable: mihi cum illo hospitium est, intercedit
      • to become a friend and guest of a person: hospitium cum aliquo facere, (con-)iungere
      • to associate with some one: societatem inire, facere cum aliquo
      • to be always in some one's company: assiduum esse cum aliquo
      • to be on friendly terms with a person: usu, familiaritate, consuetudine coniunctum esse cum aliquo
      • to be on friendly terms with a person: est mihi consuetudo, or usus cum aliquo
      • to be on friendly terms with a person: vivere cum aliquo
      • relations are strained between us: in simultate cum aliquo sum
      • to enter into conversation with some one: sermonem conferre, instituere, ordiri cum aliquo
      • to enter into conversation with some one: se dare in sermonem cum aliquo
      • to converse, talk with a person on a subject: sermonem habere cum aliquo de aliqua re (De Am. 1. 3)
      • to meet a person by arrangement, interview him: congredi cum aliquo
      • to speak personally to..: coram loqui (cum aliquo)
      • to shake hands with a person: dextram iungere cum aliquo, dextras inter se iungere
      • to be married to some one: nuptam esse cum aliquo or alicui
      • to separate from, divorce (of the man): divortium facere cum uxore
      • to have business relations with some one: contrahere rem or negotium cum aliquo (Cluent. 14. 41)
      • to transact, settle a matter with some one: transigere aliquid (de aliqua re) cum aliquo or inter se
      • to do no business with a man: nihil cum aliquo contrahere
      • to balance accounts with some one: rationes putare cum aliquo
      • to be content with 12 per cent at compound interest: centesimis cum anatocismo contentum esse (Att. 5. 21. 12)
      • to contend with some one for the pre-eminence: contendere cum aliquo de principatu (Nep. Arist. 1)
      • to submit a formal proposition to the people: agere cum populo (Leg. 3. 4. 10)
      • to be on a person's side (not ab alicuius partibus): ab (cum) aliquo stare (Brut. 79. 273)
      • to take some one's side: cum aliquo facere (Sull. 13. 36)
      • to conspire with some one: conspirare cum aliquo (contra aliquem)
      • to have unlimited power; to be invested with imperium: cum imperio esse (cf. XVI. 3)
      • to go to law with a person: (ex) iure, lege agere cum aliquo
      • to proceed against some one with the utmost rigour of the law; to strain the law in one's favour: summo iure agere cum aliquo (cf. summum ius, summa iniuria)
      • to live with some one on an equal footing: aequo iure vivere cum aliquo
      • to isolate a witness: aliquem a ceteris separare et in arcam conicere ne quis cum eo colloqui possit (Mil. 22. 60)
      • to join forces with some one: copias (arma) cum aliquo iungere or se cum aliquo iungere
      • to hold a high command: cum imperio esse
      • to be armed: cum telo esse
      • to begin a war with some one: bellum cum aliquo inire
      • to make war on a person: bellum gerere cum aliquo
      • to advance with the army: procedere cum exercitu
      • with wife and child: cum uxoribus et liberis
      • to come to close quarters: manum (us) conserere cum hoste
      • to come to close quarters: signa conferre cum hoste
      • to fight a pitched, orderly battle with an enemy: iusto (opp. tumultuario) proelio confligere cum hoste (Liv. 35. 4)
      • a hand-to-hand engagement ensued: tum pes cum pede collatus est (Liv. 28. 2)
      • with great loss: magno cum detrimento
      • to treat with some one about peace: agere cum aliquo de pace
      • to make peace with some one: pacem facere cum aliquo
      • to conclude a treaty with some one: pactionem facere cum aliquo (Sall. Iug. 40)
      • to conclude a treaty, an alliance: foedus facere (cum aliquo), icere, ferire
      • allow me to say: bona (cum) venia tua dixerim
      • putting aside, except: cum discessi, -eris, -eritis ab

    Linngithigh

    edit
    Linngithigh cardinal numbers
     <  2 3 4  > 
        Cardinal : cum
        Adverbial : cumodh

    Numeral

    edit

    cum

    1. three

    Manx

    edit

    Etymology 1

    edit

    From Old Irish con·gaib. Cognate with Irish coinnigh and Scottish Gaelic cum.

    Verb

    edit

    cum (verbal noun cummal)

    1. grip, hold
    2. keep, arrest, retain
    3. contain
    4. live, inhabit
    5. celebrate

    Etymology 2

    edit

    From Middle Irish cummaid, a denominative verb from cumma, itself from Old Irish cummae (shape, form, appearance).

    Verb

    edit

    cum (verbal noun cummey)

    1. plan, devise
    2. fabricate, shape, mould
    3. indite

    Mutation

    edit
    Manx mutation
    Radical Lenition Eclipsis
    cum chum gum
    Note: Some of these forms may be hypothetical. Not every
    possible mutated form of every word actually occurs.

    Old English

    edit

    Pronunciation

    edit

    Verb

    edit

    cum

    1. singular imperative of cuman

    Old French

    edit

    Conjunction

    edit

    cum

    1. Alternative form of come (as, like)

    Old Irish

    edit

    Alternative forms

    edit

    Pronunciation

    edit

    Verb

    edit

    ·cum

    1. Alternative form of ·cumai,[1] third-person singular present subjunctive prototonic of con·icc

    Mutation

    edit
    Mutation of cum
    radical lenition nasalization
    ·cum ·chum ·cum
    pronounced with /-ɡ(ʲ)-/

    Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in Old Irish.
    All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

    References

    edit
    1. ^ McCone, Kim (1997) The Early Irish Verb (Maynooth Monographs 1), 2nd edition, Maynooth: An Sagart, →ISBN, page 34:This process favoured the type without final unstressed vowel, whence -cum alongside -cumai (con:ic)

    Portuguese

    edit

    Pronunciation

    edit

    • Hyphenation: cum

    Etymology 1

    edit

    From contraction of preposition com (with) + masculine article um (a). Compare Galician cun.

    Contraction

    edit

    cum m sg (masculine plural cuns, feminine singular cuma, feminine plural cumas)

    1. (Portugal, informal) Contraction of com um (with a).

    Etymology 2

    edit

    Preposition

    edit

    cum

    1. (Brazil, Internet slang) Eye dialect spelling of com.
    Quotations
    edit

    For quotations using this term, see Citations:cum.

    Further reading

    edit

    Rohingya

    edit

    Etymology

    edit

    From Sanskrit चुम्ब (cumba).

    Noun

    edit

    cum

    1. kiss

    Romanian

    edit

    Alternative forms

    edit

    Etymology

    edit

    Inherited from Late Latin quomo, from Latin quōmodo.

    Pronunciation

    edit

    Adverb

    edit

    cum

    1. (interrogative or negative) how
      Cum ți-ar plăcea cafeaua?
      How would you like your coffee?

    Conjunction

    edit

    cum

    1. how
    2. as, since, seeing that
    3. (informal) Synonym of de cum (as soon as)

    Usage notes

    edit

    Sense 2 is low-pitched or unstressed, while sense 3 is high-pitched or stressed.

    Derived terms

    edit

    References

    edit

    Scots

    edit

    Etymology

    edit

    From Middle English cumen, variant of comen, from Old English cuman. Cognate with English come and Yola coome.

    Pronunciation

    edit

    Verb

    edit

    cum

    1. to come

    References

    edit

    Scottish Gaelic

    edit

    Pronunciation

    edit

    Etymology 1

    edit

    From Old Irish con·gaib. Cognate with Irish coinnigh and Manx cum.

    Verb

    edit

    cum (past chum, future cumaidh, verbal noun cumail or cumadh, past participle cumta)

    1. Alternative form of cùm (keep)

    Etymology 2

    edit

    From Old Irish cummaid (to fashion, makes), from cummae (act of cutting, shaping), verbal noun of con·ben.

    Verb

    edit

    cum (past chum, future cumaidh, verbal noun cumadh, past participle cumta)

    1. shape, form

    Mutation

    edit
    Mutation of cum
    radical lenition
    cum chum

    Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Scottish Gaelic.
    All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.

    Yola

    edit

    Verb

    edit

    cum

    1. Alternative form of coome
      • 1867, “DR. RUSSELL ON THE INHABITANTS AND DIALECT OF THE BARONY OF FORTH”, in APPENDIX:
        Fad didn'st thou cum t' ouz on zum other dey?
        [Why didn't you come to us on some other day?]

    References

    edit
    • Jacob Poole (d. 1827) (before 1828) William Barnes, editor, A Glossary, With some Pieces of Verse, of the old Dialect of the English Colony in the Baronies of Forth and Bargy, County of Wexford, Ireland, London: J. Russell Smith, published 1867, page 131