Defecate

  • 11Defecate on My Face — Single by TISM from the album Great Truckin Songs of the Renaissance …

    Wikipedia

  • 12defecate — verb ( cated; cating) Etymology: Latin defaecatus, past participle of defaecare, from de + faec , faex dregs, lees Date: 1575 transitive verb 1. to free from impurity or corruption 2. to discharge from the an …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 13defecate — v.i. [L. defaecare, to void excrement] To void feces …

    Dictionary of invertebrate zoology

  • 14defecate — defecation, n. /def i kayt /, v., defecated, defecating. v.i. 1. to void excrement from the bowels through the anus; have a bowel movement. 2. to become clear of dregs, impurities, etc. v.t. 3. to clear of dregs, impurities, etc.; purify; refine …

    Universalium

  • 15defecate — To perform defecation. * * * def·e·cate or chiefly Brit def·ae·cate def i .kāt vb, cat·ed; cat·ing vt to discharge from the anus vi to discharge feces from the bowels …

    Medical dictionary

  • 16defecate — Synonyms and related words: blow, blow out, ca ca, clean out, clear, clear away, clear off, clear out, clear the decks, crap, deplete, drain, dung, eliminate, empty, empty out, evacuate, excrete, exhaust, number two, purge, remove, scour out,… …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 17defecate — (Roget s IV) v. Syn. move (one s) bowels, void, excrete, pass; see excrete …

    English dictionary for students

  • 18defecate — def|e|cate [ˈdefıkeıt] v [Date: 1400 1500; : Latin; Origin: defaecere, from faex [i] waste material ] formal to get rid of waste matter from your ↑bowels >defecation [ˌdefıˈkeıʃən] n [U] …

    Dictionary of contemporary English

  • 19defecate — def|e|cate [ defə,keıt ] verb intransitive FORMAL to get rid of solid waste from your body at the toilet ╾ def|e|ca|tion [ ,defə keıʃn ] noun uncount …

    Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • 20defecate — def·e·cate || defɪkeɪt v. refine; have a bowel movement …

    English contemporary dictionary