What is the meaning of SUCKER. Phrases containing SUCKER
See meanings and uses of SUCKER!Slangs & AI meanings
A man attracted sexually to playing with a mans tits, a nipple sucker.
A hard drinker, a drunkard.
Someone ripe for a grifter’s scam
A nonlifting injector
Sucker is slang for a gullible person. Sucker is British slang for a boiled sweet.
Sucker, victim of swindle or fixed game
n 1. A person easily taken advantage of, cheated, blamed, or ridiculed. 2. A person. Used as a generalized term of reference, often as an intensive: He's a mean sucker. 3. An unspecified thing. Used as a generalized term of reference, often as an intensive.
Bum sucker is British slang for a sycophant.
Sucker−punch is American slang for to attack from behind.
A goner, past recover, a lost man. Also called a gone sucker and a Gone Goose.
a person who is easily cheated because they believe everything they're told
Sucker list is criminal slang for a mailing list containing the names and addresses of victims who have been successfully conned by a mailing fraud, such as a competition scam.
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v. i.
To ramfy; to tiller, as grain; to shoot out suckers.
n. pl.
An extensive order of parasitic worms. They are found in the internal cavities of animals belonging to all classes. Many species are found, also, on the gills and skin of fishes. A few species are parasitic on man, and some, of which the fluke is the most important, are injurious parasites of domestic animals. The trematodes usually have a flattened body covered with a chitinous skin, and are furnished with two or more suckers for adhesion. Most of the species are hermaphrodite. Called also Trematoda, and Trematoidea. See Fluke, Tristoma, and Cercaria.
v. i.
To form suckers; as, corn suckers abundantly.
n.
A European flounder (Hippoglossoides limandoides); -- called also rough dab, long fluke, sand fluke, and sand sucker.
n.
Any one of numerous species of trematode worms belonging to Tristoma and allied genera having a large posterior sucker and two small anterior ones. They usually have broad, thin, and disklike bodies, and are parasite on the gills and skin of fishes.
n.
A horse given to wind-sucking
n.
Any one of numerous species of North American fresh-water cyprinoid fishes of the family Catostomidae; so called because the lips are protrusile. The flesh is coarse, and they are of little value as food. The most common species of the Eastern United States are the northern sucker (Catostomus Commersoni), the white sucker (C. teres), the hog sucker (C. nigricans), and the chub, or sweet sucker (Erimyzon sucetta). Some of the large Western species are called buffalo fish, red horse, black horse, and suckerel.
n.
A shoot or sprout of a plant; a sucker.
n. pl.
An order of Infusoria having the body armed with somewhat stiff, tubular processes which they use as suckers in obtaining their food. They are usually stalked.
n.
A little shoot; a twig; a sucker.
n. pl.
A suborder of fishes including Gobiesox and allied genera. These fishes have soft-rayed fins, and a ventral sucker supported in front by the pectoral fins. They are destitute of scales.
n.
The kestrel.
n.
Any one of numerous species of cestode worms belonging to Taenia and many allied genera. The body is long, flat, and composed of numerous segments or proglottids varying in shape, those toward the end of the body being much larger and longer than the anterior ones, and containing the fully developed sexual organs. The head is small, destitute of a mouth, but furnished with two or more suckers (which vary greatly in shape in different genera), and sometimes, also, with hooks for adhesion to the walls of the intestines of the animals in which they are parasitic. The larvae (see Cysticercus) live in the flesh of various creatures, and when swallowed by another animal of the right species develop into the mature tapeworm in its intestine. See Illustration in Appendix.
n.
A shoot of a plant, springing from the root or bottom of the original stalk; a sucker.
a.
Producing suckers, or shoots resembling suckers.
a.
Producing stolons; putting forth suckers.
v. t.
To strip off the suckers or shoots from; to deprive of suckers; as, to sucker maize.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Sucker
imp. & p. p.
of Sucker
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