I'm trying to find the roots for its prevalent usage, especially in north america. There is an interesting explanation to it, which says: 30 cum is the latin word for with and is usually used to join two nouns, showing that something serves two purposes
Fresh precum / cum from a wet dream that I had today in the morning
Haha jk but sounds like this chick has a raging sex drive but there's many things i get off from porn
Deep throat on cock, cum on face, girls stick out tongue and swallows, facial expressions while fucking.
4 with a grain of salt is a 1600s direct translation from modern latin cum grano salis (etymoline), and salis is genitive of sal, which, in addition to ‘salt’, figuratively means ‘intellectual acuteness, good sense, shrewdness, wit’ (charlton t Lewis, charles short, a latin dictionary). This shit is crazy the resin has hardened into a glass like consistency around strands of hair It feels like shards of glass are permanently stuck to my head xd
I know you guys get cum stuck in your hair all the time and it's probably a similar situation Do you have any tips for me? I understand that the terms cum laude and with honors are interchangeable, but which one is better understood in us and more commonly used? I wanted to use the word cum to avoid repeating and in the following phrase
Is there a good substitute for this word?
2 you're thinking of cum (/kʌm/), which means Also used as (used to describe things with a dual nature or function) 17 cum grano salis is the latin version of the phrase take it with a grain of salt (with) a grain of salt, in modern english, is an idiom which means to view something with skepticism, or to not take it literally