scatology

English

Etymology

From Ancient Greek σκῶρ (skôr, excrement) + -ology.

Noun

scatology (countable and uncountable, plural scatologies)

  1. The scientific study or chemical analysis of faeces.
  2. A filthy epithet.
    • 2008, Daniel Bernardi, The Persistence of Whiteness
      [] lingo of the streets with its spewed out scatologies and its anti-womanist rhetoric of "hoes and bitches" all so evocative of life in the ghetto []
  3. (psychology, medicine) Interest in or obsession with faeces or other excrement.
    • 2015, Henry Powell and Howard Kushner, “Mozart at play: The limitations of attributing etiology of genius to Tourette syndrome and mental illness”, in Eckart Altenmüller, Stanley Finger, and François Boller, editors, Music, Neurology, and Neuroscience, page 290:
      Like James Joyce’s Leopold Bloom in the novel Ulysses (1922), Mozart seemed utterly comfortable with himself, bodily functions, and all. [] In our view Mozart’s so-called scatology is part of his culture and personality and, as we have argued, intimately connected with his creativity.
  4. Literature, humor, or pornography featuring excrement or excreting.
    • 2010, Julie Cross, Humor in Contemporary Junior Literature, page 48:
      The move to out-and-out scatology in humorous texts for junior readers takes off in the later 1990s, following the overt scatological humor of ground-breaking ‘bum and poo’ picture books for younger readers, such as Holzwarth’s The Little Mole Who Knew It Was None of His Business (1998).

Synonyms

Derived terms

Translations

This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.