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Definition of Coition
1. Noun. The act of sexual procreation between a man and a woman; the man's penis is inserted into the woman's vagina and excited until orgasm and ejaculation occur.
Generic synonyms: Sex, Sex Activity, Sexual Activity, Sexual Practice
Specialized synonyms: Defloration, Ass, Fuck, Fucking, Nookie, Nooky, Piece Of Ass, Piece Of Tail, Roll In The Hay, Screw, Screwing, Shag, Shtup, Hank Panky, Penetration, Criminal Congress, Unlawful Carnal Knowledge
Terms within: Insemination
Derivative terms: Coital, Copulate
Definition of Coition
1. n. A coming together; sexual intercourse; copulation.
Definition of Coition
1. Noun. Sexual intercourse. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Coition
1. coitus [n -S] - See also: coitus
Medical Definition of Coition
1. Synonym: coitus. Origin: L. Co-eo, pp. -itus, to come together (05 Mar 2000)
Lexicographical Neighbors of Coition
coinvestigators coinvestor coinvestors coir coire licet coirs coisogenic coistrel coistrels coistril | coistrils coit coitional coitions coits coix cojoin cojoined cojoining cojoins |
Literary usage of Coition
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Satan in society by Nicholas Francis Cooke, Physician (1873)
"Disastrous Consequences of Excessive coition. ascribe to this canse those protracted
... It is a fact long admitted in science that excessive coition during ..."
2. Arcana Cœlestia: The Heavenly Arcana Contained in the Holy Scriptures Or by Emanuel Swedenborg (1874)
"It came to pass as every one of the flock of the first in coition grew warm —that
... That the first in coition are things spontaneous, is evident from the ..."
3. William Gilbert of Colchester, Physician of London: On the Loadstone and by William Gilbert, Paul Fleury Mottelay, Edward Wright (1893)
"IN the equinoctial circle A there is no coition of the ends of a piece of ...
at the poles the coition is very strong. The greater the distance from the ..."
4. The Animal Kingdom Arranged in Conformity with Its Organization by Georges Cuvier, Edward Griffith, Charles Hamilton Smith, Edward Pidgeon, John Edward Gray, George Robert Gray (1834)
"Several are viviparous, and there is a tubercle near the anus of all of them,
and in both sexes, which appears destined for the purposes of coition. ..."