Apedia

Sucked Sucking Suck Verb Hold Mouth Pull Muscles

word suck
definition
verb
If you suck something, you hold it in your mouth and pull at it with the muscles in your cheeks and tongue, for example in order to get liquid out of it.
They waited in silence and sucked their sweets.
He sucked on his straw.
Doran was clutching the bottle with both hands and sucking intently.
If something sucks a liquid, gas, or object in a particular direction, it draws it there with a powerful force.
The pollution-control team is at the scene and is due to start sucking up oil any time now.
The air is sucked out by a high-powered fan.
They sucked in deep lungfuls of air.
The pilot was almost sucked from the cockpit when a window shattered.
If you are sucked into a bad situation, you are unable to prevent yourself from becoming involved in it.
He warned that if the President tried to enforce control, the country would be sucked into a power vacuum.
...the extent to which they have been sucked into the cycle of violence.
If someone says that something sucks, they are indicating that they think it is very bad.
The system sucks.
inflections suckssuckingsucked
cefr-level C1

Tags: oxford5k::cefr-level:c1

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