Thesaurus talk:vagina

El corte inglés
This is stated as being Portuguese, and meaning "the English cut". Would anyone disagree with me if I changed it to "Spanish, meaning 'the English court'", as I'm pretty certain that's the case? I mean, if we're going to be vulgar, let's be correctly vulgar ;-) UrsusMaximus 21:46, 22 January 2006 (UTC) Go for it, 'be bold' MGSpiller 01:50, 23 January 2006 (UTC)

Yes I'd disagree with you. Unless you can provide examples, references, etc., to prove that

el corte inglés =spanish= the English court

then, I'd agree with you. I mean, I could be Portuguese & mean what the definition defines it as.

Some comments on this from a reader: "The English Court" would translate to Spanish as "La Corte Inglesa" (fem gender.)  "El Corte Inglés" would translate to "The English Cut" as in the "cut" or style of a suit (if this is the meaning of the original sentence). Without the context it would be difficult to determine what is means by "cut."

As to the German lemma "vagina": nouns begin with capital letters: Muschi, not *muschi. Other synonyma would be: Mumu, Pflaume, Pussy,...

RFC

 * "From: WT:RFC"

Is this what WikiSaurus entries look like now? I haven't been there for a while and I'm surprised at what is happening. No alphabetical order. Misspellings, "the" included in wikification (eg, "the matrix" for "the matrix", and a free-for-all of unattested protologisms and other nonsense. This reminds me far too much of Urban Dictionary*.

This needs a thorough going-over. &mdash; Paul G 09:27, 25 March 2006 (UTC)

* I see from that Urban Dictionary is out as a book... oh no, all those protologisms are now in print and have been given an air of legitimacy! How long before they get submitted here with "well, it's in print, so it must be OK"? &mdash; Paul G 09:27, 25 March 2006 (UTC)


 * Perhaps we should revisit explicitly prohibiting UrbanDictionary nonsense. Like the "Sniglettes" book from a few years ago, their entries are mostly intended as jokes.  Perhaps we need a better classification for that kind of "publication."  --Connel MacKenzie T C 16:35, 25 March 2006 (UTC)
 * WikiSaurus entries are many and varied in format. Some attract a lot of dubious words, but others are developing seriously. Some need extensive cleanup, others do not. I'm interested in what TheDaveRoss is heading toward with WikiSaurus:book. So, don't get distracted by those very, very popular entries such as WikiSaurus:vagina. Or try cleaning them up a bit like WikiSaurus:breasts--Richardb 05:35, 2 April 2006 (UTC)

I'm not in a position to address this (first time wikipedia edit, no account = can't edit main page?), but I wish someone would look into including links to "yonic" and "yoni" here. It's essentially the feminine equivalent for "phallic/phallus", and sadly not well known. Reference: http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/yonic and  http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/yoni

Arabic and Hebrew names for vulva
I write it here cause it's impossible to edit

Arabic:

farj

farjulmar'ah

awrah

cuss

Hebrew:

pot

ervah (fits all genitals)

To the portuguese part
Hi im brazilian, and i could'nt help but notice you have forgotten the word "buceta" in the portuguese part. It is sort of equivalent to cunt in weight and meaning, bt if yuo included cunt already i see no reason why not... I mean no harm or anything.

Front bottom
I would say to either include 'front bum' or replace 'front bottom' as front bum is more common

Wikisaurus:vagina Some new more spanish used aceptions
Hello this are some words that are used too in some regions of spain. + chocho ( junior version of senior "coño" - similar as cunt) + chichi + chirri + parrus (no translation) + felpudo (near english translation "doormat") + bizcocho ( like sponge cake, by the texture) + potorro (no translation) + cucaracha ( cuca abbreviated - english translation "cockroach" - due to the dark color) + patata (potato, by the form) + castaña (chestnut - by the form and color) + babosa ( slug - by the humidity) + fafarique (and antique word usage) + chirla ( a sister of "almeja" - clam ) + ostra (oyster - by the similarity with oyster/pearl(clitoris) -> ostra/perla(clitoris))

You need to add "wizard's sleeve", "axe wound", "whispering eye" and "Clunge"

"girl penis"
If this is a real term, wouldn't it refer either to a transgender woman's penis (cf. ), or alternatively perhaps to a clitoris? It seems unlikely that this means vagina, but I could be wrong. 70.172.194.25 06:39, 11 January 2023 (UTC)


 * "mooshoo" is also questionable, and I would apply rfv-term if this page weren't protected. 70.172.194.25 06:41, 11 January 2023 (UTC)

RFV discussion: January–February 2023
Rfv-term for girl penis, life force, mooshoo (cf. moo shu and its alt forms), and moocha in the sense of "vagina", for which I was unable to find persuasive evidence. I can't add the template as the page is protected. Also see my comment on the talk page.

Notes on some other synonyms that I'm not currently sending to RfV (but others can do so if they want): 70.172.194.25 05:43, 24 January 2023 (UTC)
 * engine doesn't have the sense on the page, but it's in Cassell's Dictionary of Slang. Cassell's gives dates but not quotations; I was unable to locate the uses on my own, but I didn't try very hard.
 * foo-foo/fufu doesn't have the sense on the page, but it's in Cassell's and searching for "her foo-foo" on Google Groups brings up some examples.
 * Grand Canyon doesn't have the sense on the page, and Cassell's and Partridge only have the sense anus/rectum. But searching for "her Grand Canyon" on Google Groups brings up at least a few uses that seem to unambiguously mean "vagina", e.g.,,.
 * monosyllable. To be clear, not in the sense "the word cunt", but the referent of that word itself. Most of the hits for ["monosyllable" "vagina"] are dictionaries or mentions. There is no dearth of sources claiming this is a legitimate Victorian term. That said, finding it in use is proving more difficult, at least with the sources I have access to. In the first ten Google Books results pages for "her monosyllable", the only hit I noticed that was a reference to genitalia and not a literal utterance was this 2011 romantic novel.
 * strange has a sense "Sex outside of one's current relationship", and Cassell's provides the meaning "an unknown woman, usu. in a sexual context". Partridge is similar. It's quite possible that the semantic range of the term extends to the female genitalia, but if it's only used as such in contexts like "get some strange" where the currently listed sense applies, then it's iffy to list as a synonym of the body part. That said, I didn't look too hard for this.
 * twinkle in this sense seems rare, but I found at least one relevant hit on Google Groups and one on the Web (other than the Swedish song given as a usage example).


 * I think we might be able to just remove redlinks without a vote, since in a recent edit we removed quite a few redlinks from thesaurus:urinate. However the only discussion I found was quite old: Wiktionary_talk:Criteria_for_inclusion. — Soap — 13:15, 24 January 2023 (UTC)

RFV Failed, although nothing is actually failing here... clearly existing is a bare minimum for inclusion on the thesaurus. Ioaxxere (talk) 06:22, 24 February 2023 (UTC)

addition....
Please add: front butt 2003:CA:871E:B42:6AF4:BDE9:F335:85C 06:43, 30 June 2023 (UTC)

Cake?
“He want that cake.” Keywriterz (talk) 22:08, 11 April 2024 (UTC)