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Definition of suck verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

suck

verb
 
/sʌk/
 
/sʌk/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they suck
 
/sʌk/
 
/sʌk/
he / she / it sucks
 
/sʌks/
 
/sʌks/
past simple sucked
 
/sʌkt/
 
/sʌkt/
past participle sucked
 
/sʌkt/
 
/sʌkt/
-ing form sucking
 
/ˈsʌkɪŋ/
 
/ˈsʌkɪŋ/
Idioms Phrasal Verbs
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  1. [transitive] suck something (+ adv./prep.) to take liquid, air, etc. into your mouth by using the muscles of your lips
    • to suck the juice from an orange
    • She was noisily sucking up milk through a straw.
    • He sucked the blood from a cut on his finger.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • noisily
    • away
    • in
    preposition
    • at
    • from
    • on
    See full entry
  2. [intransitive, transitive] to keep something in your mouth and pull on it with your lips and tongue
    • suck at/on something The baby sucked at its mother's breast.
    • He sucked at the wound on his hand.
    • She sucked on a mint.
    • suck something She sucked a mint.
    • Stop sucking your thumb!
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • noisily
    • away
    • in
    preposition
    • at
    • from
    • on
    See full entry
  3. [transitive] to take liquid, air, etc. out of something
    • suck something + adv./prep. The pump sucks air out through the valve.
    • suck something + adj. Greenfly can literally suck a plant dry.
    • The machine sucks up mud and stones from the bottom of the pond.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • noisily
    • away
    • in
    preposition
    • at
    • from
    • on
    See full entry
  4. [transitive] suck somebody/something + adv./prep. to pull somebody/something with great force in a particular direction
    • The canoe was sucked down into the whirlpool.
    • The mud had sucked him in up to his waist.
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • noisily
    • away
    • in
    preposition
    • at
    • from
    • on
    See full entry
  5. something sucks
    [intransitive] (slang) used to say that something is very bad
    • Their new album sucks.
    compare rock
  6. Word OriginOld English sūcan (verb), from an Indo-European imitative root; related to soak.
Idioms
milk/suck somebody/something dry
  1. to get from somebody/something all the money, help, information, etc. they have, usually giving nothing in return
    • By earning millions from racing and giving pennies back, the bookmakers are sucking the sport dry.
suck it and see
  1. (British English, informal) used to say that the only way to know if something is suitable is to try it
suck it up
  1. (informal) to accept something bad and deal with it well, controlling your emotions
teach your grandmother to suck eggs
  1. (British English, informal) to tell or show somebody how to do something that they can already do well, and probably better than you can
See suck in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee suck in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
trait
noun
 
 
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