suckitude

noun
/ˈsʌ.kɪ.tjuːd//ˈsʌ.kɪ.tjuːd/US

Etymology

Etymology tree Proto-Germanic *sūkaną Proto-West Germanic *sūkan Old English sūcan Middle English souken English suck Proto-Indo-European *-tu- Proto-Indo-European *-d- Proto-Indo-European *-Hō Proto-Italic *tūdō Latin -tūdō Middle French -itudebor. English -itude English suckitude From suck + -itude, by analogy with words such as altitude, gratitude, etc.

  1. derived from *sewg-
  2. derived from *sūkaną — “to suck, suckle
  3. inherited from *sūkan
  4. inherited from sūcan — “to suck
  5. inherited from souken
  6. formed as suckitude — “suck + -itude

Definitions

  1. The condition, quality, extent, or measure of the degree to which something or someone…

    The condition, quality, extent, or measure of the degree to which something or someone sucks; suckiness.

    • To anyone outside of the precious inner sanctum that includes you, your spouse, the kid's grandparents and some of the tiny dimwit's classmates—your kid sucks so bad he or she is a living breathing vacuum of suckitude.
    • Oh, I'm sure Obama intended to do the right thing when he started off, but the Three Principles of Eternal Democratic Suckitude tend to defeat all comers, [...]
    • TAYLOR McBride let the suckitude of that word hang in the air until his agent nodded. “On ice?” Once more the disdainful tone.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for suckitude. 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