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Aragonese
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /t͡ʃuˈpa(ɾ)/
- Rhymes: -a(ɾ)
- Syllabification: chu‧par
Verb
chupar
- (transitive, intransitive) to suck
References
Ladino
Verb
chupar (Latin spelling)
- to suck
Portuguese
Etymology
Probably of onomatopoeic/imitative origin.
Pronunciation
Verb
chupar (first-person singular present chupo, first-person singular preterite chupei, past participle chupado)
- (transitive) to suck (to use the mouth to pull in (liquid etc))
- Synonym: sugar
- (transitive) to suck (to work the lips and tongue on)
- (slang) to suck off, to blow (to give a blowjob)
Conjugation
1Brazilian Portuguese.
2European Portuguese.
Related terms
Descendants
Spanish
Etymology
Imitative.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /t͡ʃuˈpaɾ/
- Rhymes: -aɾ
- Syllabification: chu‧par
Verb
chupar (first-person singular present chupo, first-person singular preterite chupé, past participle chupado)
- to suck
- Synonym: mamar
- to absorb
- (slang) to suck off, to blow (to give a blowjob)
- (colloquial) to hog (to greedily take more than one's share, to take precedence at the expense of another or others.)
- (colloquial) to hog (in team sports, abuse the individual game with the ball)
- (Mexico, Chile, Peru, slang) to drink an alcoholic beverage
- (Mexico, slang) to consume too fast or waste money, gasoline or another resource
- (Mexico, slang) to lose muscular mass or strength
- (Mexico, slang) to lose one's youthful or not-too-mature appearance
- (reflexive, slang) to suck off
- (reflexive, slang) to put up with
Conjugation
1Mostly obsolete, now mainly used in legal language.
2Argentine and Uruguayan voseo prefers the tú form for the present subjunctive.
Selected combined forms of chupar
These forms are generated automatically and may not actually be used. Pronoun usage varies by region.
|
singular
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plural
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1st person
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2nd person
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3rd person
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1st person
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2nd person
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3rd person
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with infinitive chupar
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dative
|
chuparme
|
chuparte
|
chuparle, chuparse
|
chuparnos
|
chuparos
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chuparles, chuparse
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accusative
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chuparme
|
chuparte
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chuparlo, chuparla, chuparse
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chuparnos
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chuparos
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chuparlos, chuparlas, chuparse
|
|
with gerund chupando
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dative
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chupándome
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chupándote
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chupándole, chupándose
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chupándonos
|
chupándoos
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chupándoles, chupándose
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accusative
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chupándome
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chupándote
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chupándolo, chupándola, chupándose
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chupándonos
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chupándoos
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chupándolos, chupándolas, chupándose
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|
with informal second-person singular tú imperative chupa
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dative
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chúpame
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chúpate
|
chúpale
|
chúpanos
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not used
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chúpales
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accusative
|
chúpame
|
chúpate
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chúpalo, chúpala
|
chúpanos
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not used
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chúpalos, chúpalas
|
|
with informal second-person singular vos imperative chupá
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dative
|
chupame
|
chupate
|
chupale
|
chupanos
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not used
|
chupales
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accusative
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chupame
|
chupate
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chupalo, chupala
|
chupanos
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not used
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chupalos, chupalas
|
|
with formal second-person singular imperative chupe
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dative
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chúpeme
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not used
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chúpele, chúpese
|
chúpenos
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not used
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chúpeles
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accusative
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chúpeme
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not used
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chúpelo, chúpela, chúpese
|
chúpenos
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not used
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chúpelos, chúpelas
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|
with first-person plural imperative chupemos
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dative
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not used
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chupémoste
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chupémosle
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chupémonos
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chupémoos
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chupémosles
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accusative
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not used
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chupémoste
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chupémoslo, chupémosla
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chupémonos
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chupémoos
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chupémoslos, chupémoslas
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with informal second-person plural imperative chupad
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dative
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chupadme
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not used
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chupadle
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chupadnos
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chupaos
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chupadles
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accusative
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chupadme
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not used
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chupadlo, chupadla
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chupadnos
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chupaos
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chupadlos, chupadlas
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|
with formal second-person plural imperative chupen
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dative
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chúpenme
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not used
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chúpenle
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chúpennos
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not used
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chúpenles, chúpense
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accusative
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chúpenme
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not used
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chúpenlo, chúpenla
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chúpennos
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not used
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chúpenlos, chúpenlas, chúpense
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Derived terms
Further reading