pathic

See also: -pathic

English

Etymology

From Latin pathicus, from Ancient Greek παθικός (pathikós), from πάθος (páthos, suffering, feeling), from πάσχω (páskhō, I feel, I suffer).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /ˈpæθɪk/
  • Rhymes: -æθɪk

Noun

pathic (plural pathics)

  1. (now literary) Synonym of bottom: a passive usually-male partner in homosexual anal intercourse.
    • 1810, Lord Byron, letter (to Henry Drury), 3 May 1810:
      In England the vices in fashion are whoring & drinking, in Turkey, Sodomy & smoking, we prefer a girl and a bottle, they a pipe and pathic.
    • 1962 [1959], William S. Burroughs, Naked Lunch, New York: Grove Press, page 115:
      And enough of these gooey saints with a look of pathic dismay as if they getting fucked up the ass and try not to pay any mind.
    • 1975, Robertson Davies, World of Wonders:
      But in those days I was Paul Dempster, who had been made to forget it and take a name from the side of a barn, and be the pathic of a perverted drug-taker.
    • 1976, Robert Nye, Falstaff:
      Clermont (known to his friends as Cordelia) was a nancy, a pathic, a male varlet, a masculine whore.

Translations

Adjective

pathic (comparative more pathic, superlative most pathic)

  1. Passive; suffering.
  2. Relating to disease.

References

Anagrams

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