pedicator
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin pēdīcātor (“sodomizer, assfucker”), equivalent to pedicate + -or.
Noun
pedicator (plural pedicators)
- (uncommon, dated) A person who takes the penetrating role in anal sex.
- 1884, Friedrich Karl Forberg, translated by Viscount Julian Smithson M.A., Manual of classical Erotology, Manchester, page 77:
- Men preferred to be supposed pedicators rather than patients […]
- 1904, Dr. Jacobus X., Crossways of sex: A study in eroto-pathology, volume 2, page 314:
- […] and the pedicator must proceed slowly and without brutality.
- 2008, Kenneth Borris, “Sodomizing science: Codes, Patricio Tricasso, and the constitutional morphologies of Renaissance male same-sex lovers”, in George S. Rousseau and Kenneth Borris, editors, The Sciences of Homosexuality in Early Modern Europe, Guild Press, page 145:
- For this physiognomer, the cinaedus and pedicator are complementary aspects of what his contemporaries […] call “masculine love.”
Latin
Alternative forms
Etymology
From pēdīcō (“sodomize, assfuck, buttfuck”) + -tor.
Pronunciation
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): [peː.diːˈkaː.tɔr]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): [pe.d̪iˈkaː.t̪or]
Noun
pēdīcātor m (genitive pēdīcātōris); third declension
- sodomiser, assfucker, buttfucker (a man who engages in anal sex as the penetrator)
Declension
Third-declension noun.
| singular | plural | |
|---|---|---|
| nominative | pēdīcātor | pēdīcātōrēs |
| genitive | pēdīcātōris | pēdīcātōrum |
| dative | pēdīcātōrī | pēdīcātōribus |
| accusative | pēdīcātōrem | pēdīcātōrēs |
| ablative | pēdīcātōre | pēdīcātōribus |
| vocative | pēdīcātor | pēdīcātōrēs |
Synonyms
- (sodomite): pēdīcō