mastuprate
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English[edit]
Etymology[edit]
From Renaissance or New Latin mastuprari, an alternation of classical Latin masturbārī influenced by stuprō (“defile”). See also mastupration. Attested in English from the late 16th century.
Verb[edit]
mastuprate (third-person singular simple present mastuprates, present participle mastuprating, simple past and past participle mastuprated)
- (rare, obsolete) masturbate
- c. 1751, Dr. John Rae (journal), quoted in: Allen Edwardes (1966), The Rape of India: A Biography of Robert Clive and a Sexual History of the Conquest of Hindustan, p. 93:
- His Black Wench reports him Impotent for Coitus per Vaginam, yet hath seen him mastuprate on occasion;
- c. 1751, Dr. John Rae (journal), quoted in: Allen Edwardes (1966), The Rape of India: A Biography of Robert Clive and a Sexual History of the Conquest of Hindustan, p. 93:
Related terms[edit]
References[edit]
- “mastuprate, v.”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, March 2001.