Fruit Sucking Moth

SUCKING definition: 1. present participle of suck 2. to pull in liquid or air through your mouth without using your…. Learn more.

Fruit Sucking Moth 1

SUCKING definition: not weaned. See examples of sucking used in a sentence.

Define sucking. sucking synonyms, sucking pronunciation, sucking translation, English dictionary definition of sucking. adj. Not yet weaned. American Heritage ...

sucking, drawing of fluids into the mouth by creating a vacuum pressure in the oral cavity. Mammalian infants rely on this method of food ingestion until they are capable of eating more solid substances. A partial vacuum is created in the oral cavity by retracting the tongue to the back of the mouth. The rear portion of the tongue seals against the roof of the mouth, allowing liquids to be ...

sucking him knee-deep sucking in life sucking on daddy's titty "sucking up" sucking up government debt sucking up most of the traffic sucking wind the cough drop I'd been sucking on shot from my mouth the lice sucking and f***ing on his head the sucking dry of Christians Thumb- sucking Thumb- sucking habit [colloquialism?] we need some major ...

Fruit Sucking Moth 5

Definition of Sucking in the Definitions.net dictionary. Meaning of Sucking. What does Sucking mean? Information and translations of Sucking in the most comprehensive dictionary definitions resource on the web.

Fruit Sucking Moth 6

The modern English word moth comes from Old English moððe (cf. Northumbrian mohðe) from Common Germanic (compare Old Norse motti, Dutch mot, and German Motte all meaning 'moth'). Its origins are possibly related to the Old English maða meaning ' maggot ' or from the root of midge which until the 16th century was used mostly to indicate the larva, usually in reference to devouring clothes.