buttock
English
Etymology
Inherited from Middle English buttok, probably from Old English buttuc (“end; end piece”; also, “short piece of land”). Attested with its current anatomical meaning since 1300. A diminutive form of what is presumably the Old English precursor of butt + -ock (diminutive suffix).
Pronunciation
Noun
buttock (plural buttocks)
- (usually in the plural) Each of the two large fleshy halves of the posterior part of the body between the base of the back, the perineum and the top of the legs.
- Synonyms: (crude) asscheek, cheek; see also Thesaurus:buttocks
- c. 1615–1620 (date written), Tho[mas] Middleton, The Mayor of Quinborough: A Comedy. […] [Hengist, King of Kent], London: […] Henry Herringman, […], published 1661, →OCLC, Act V, scene i, page 61:
- Run, run, come you hither / Novv, take all my Cuſhions dovvn and thvvack them ſoundly, / After my Feaſt of Millers: for their Buttocks / Have left a peck of flovver in them, beat them carefully […]
- (nautical) The convexity of a ship behind, under the stern.
- 1925, Adventure, volume 54:
- There came a blast of freezing wind that made Skell shrug himself against the oaken post on which the ship's buttock rested.
Usage notes
Translations
each of the two large fleshy halves of the posterior part of the body
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See also
Further reading
- Webster's Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary, Springfield, Massachusetts, G.&C. Merriam Co., 1967
- Douglas Harper (2001–2024) “buttock”, in Online Etymology Dictionary.
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