Indonesian

edit

Etymology

edit

From Malay titit. Compare Sundanese titit, Tagalog titi, Cebuano tintin, Maranao otin, Hokkien 弟弟 (tî-tî / tī-tī / tī-tî / tih-tih, euphemism or slang term for penis).

Nomen

edit

titit (first-person possessive tititku, second-person possessive tititmu, third-person possessive tititnya)

  1. (colloquial, childish, mildly vulgar) penis

Usage notes

edit
  • Never used in scientific and medical contexts. Does not have any other uses, unlike English dick.
  • Less vulgar than kontol & peler.

Further reading

edit

Kankanaey

edit

Pronunciation

edit
  • (Standard Kankanaey) IPA(key): /ˈtitit/ [ˈtiː.ti̞t̚]
  • Rhymes: -itit
  • Syllabification: ti‧tit

Nomen

edit

titit

  1. bird

Karao

edit

Nomen

edit

titit

  1. bird

Sundanese

edit

Nomen

edit

titit

  1. (childish) penis
  2. duckling oder gosling
    • 1930, “Tatanen — Dagang — Karadjinan”, in Volksalmanak Soenda XII, Bale Poestaka, Dagang titit dina ĕndog, page 229:
      Di Tiongkok Kidul, geus ilahar pisan toekang mĕri teh sok ngadjaroealan titit dina ĕndogna keneh
      [Di Tiongkok Kidul, geus ilahar pisan tukang meri téh sok ngajarualan titit dina endogna kénéh]
      In Southern China, it is common to find duck vendors selling ducklings while they are still in the egg.