bukkake

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

Borrowed from Japanese 打っ掛け (bukkake, act of splashing), from the verb 打っ掛ける (bukkakeru, to splash (with a liquid) rudely), from 打つ (butsu, to hit) and 掛ける (kakeru, to pour).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /buˈkɑː.ki/, /buˈkæ.ki/, /buˈkɑː.ke/

Noun

bukkake (uncountable)

  1. A Japanese dish made by pouring broth over cold noodles, commonly udon.
  2. A sex act in which multiple people ejaculate on another person.
    • 2004 January, Baghdad Billion: A Benton Run Adventure by Clifford J. Farides, :
      When the phone on his desk buzzed with a rude chirp, Brian Babylon picked up the receiver in one smooth movement as he continued browsing the Internet for fresh Bukkake web sites.
    • 2005 March, Lance Olsen, 10: 01, page 74:
      Tuesdays she drives to a warehouse across town to star in bukkake videos. Seventy-five men cum on her face and in her hair during a shoot.
    • 2005 April, Tangerinephant By Kevin Dole 2, :
      This was a role she was well acquainted with, but it had changed and she longed for the simple days not long ago, terse formalized meetings she watched in a cage suspended from the ceilling, ending with ritual bukkake.
    • 2005 October, Carly Milne, Naked Ambition: Women Who Are Changing Pornography, page 7:
      When a friend tells me she's going to get a facial, I immediately think bukkake.

Translations


Japanese

Romanization

bukkake

  1. Rōmaji transcription of ぶっかけ

Portuguese

Noun

bukkake m (uncountable)

  1. bukkake
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