Is there any other kind?
can anyone offer an explanation as to why exactly it is referred to as "pee"
I mean, tinkle makes some kind of sense, but pee??? I just don't get it.
can anyone offer an explanation as to why exactly it is referred to as "pee"
I mean, tinkle makes some kind of sense, but pee??? I just don't get it.
can anyone offer an explanation as to why exactly it is referred to as "pee"
I mean, tinkle makes some kind of sense, but pee??? I just don't get it.
Because it comes out of the pee-pee.
Short for piss, which likely comes from the French as pissoir means urinal in French.
Not this.
pee2 [pee] Show IPA verb, peed, pee·ing, noun Slang: Sometimes Vulgar.
verb (used without object)
1.
to urinate.
noun
2.
urine.
3.
the act of urinating.
Origin:
1875–80; euphemism for piss, using initial letter
.piss (v.) Look up piss at Dictionary.com
late 13c., from Old French pissier "urinate" (12c.), from Vulgar Latin *pissiare, of imitative origin. To piss away (money, etc.) is from 1948. Related: Pissed; pissing. Pissing while (1550s) once meant "a short time."
He shall not piss my money against the wall; he shall not have my money to spend in liquor. ["Dictionary of Buckish Slang, University Wit and Pickpocket Eloquence," London, 1811]
piss (n.) Look up piss at Dictionary.com
late 14c., from piss (v.). As a pure intensifier (piss-poor, piss-ugly, etc.) it dates from World War II. Piss and vinegar first attested 1942. Piss-prophet "one who diagnosed diseases by inspection of urine" is attested from 1620s. Piss proud "erect upon awakening" is attested from 1796.
Golly Wally, way to suck the fun out of one of my favorite words.
I aimz to pleaze.