-
nouns irrumatio and irrumation, and the verb irrumate, come from the
Latin irrumāre,
meaning to
force receptive male oral ****. J. L. Butrica, in his review...
- "bottom"
person in that act, i.e., the one
being penetrated. The term
irrumare is
likewise a
transitive verb,
meaning to "insert one's **** into another...
-
submission and control. This is
apparent in the two
Latin words for the act:
irrumare (to
penetrate orally), and
fellare (to be
penetrated orally).
Under this...
-
aggressive connotations attached themselves to pēdīcāre 'to sodomise' and
irrumāre 'to
force fellatio' respectively,
which were used with mock
hostility in...
-
introduction to
Roman ****ualities, p. 12; Amy Richlin, "The
Meaning of
irrumare in
Catullus and Martial,"
classical Philology 76.1 (1981) 40–46. Williams...
- 58. Williams, p. 20 Hallett, p. 12 Richlin, Amy (1981). "The
Meaning of
irrumare in
Catullus and Martial".
classical Philology. 76 (1): 40–46. JSTOR 269544...
-
active position of sucking. This is an
important distinction from the word
irrumare,
which translates to "to mouth-****." This verb
would have been used by...
-
introduction to
Roman ****ualities, p. 12; Amy Richlin, "The
Meaning of
irrumare in
Catullus and Martial",
classical Philology 76.1 (1981) 40–46. Eva Cantarella...
- of
Michigan Press. p. 82. Richlin, Amy (January 1981). "The
Meaning of
Irrumare in
Catullus and Martial".
classical Philology. 76: 40–46. doi:10.1086/366597...