pathic

noun
/ˈpæθɪk/UK

Etymology

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

  1. derived from παθικός
  2. derived from pathicus

Definitions

  1. Synonym of bottom

    Synonym of bottom: a passive usually-male partner in homosexual anal intercourse.

    • 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.
    • 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.
    • 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.
  2. Passive

    Passive; suffering.

  3. Relating to disease.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for pathic. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA