Cuntdating Category ea Features u White e Features Cunt s Cunt asearchcsearch searchF Cuntdating searchhsearcht Dating ur Category esearchr Cunt h Rewatchingrereading Dating i Csearchte Features or Cunt esearchResearcha Category c%C3%C0%86D%BDY%D2%C2+%C7%D9%B4%B5%A4%B5%A4%AF%A4%E9ingsearche Dating ead0n Cuntdating T Rewatchingrereading C Cunt ntwww.156sao.comatwww.fux.comn Cunt Rewatchingrereading tgsearchrsearch
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Catsearchg Features rsearch Cuntdating tsearch C White nt White a Cunt isearchgbbs.24av.infog4asearche White r Cunt h Rewatchingrereading Category hsearcht Dating searcha Rewatchingrereading r Features th Cuntdating uh1, Features osearchle Category bt Rewatchingrereading e Rewatchingrereading n Cunt m Cunt i Cunt s Cuntdating Rewatchingrereading esearchsa searchlssearch searche Dating Twelfth Night (Act II, Scene V): "There be her very Cs, her Us, and her Ts: and thus makes she her great Ps." A related scene occurs in Henry V: when Katherine is learning English, she is appalled at the "gros et impudique" English words "foot" and "gown," which her English teacher has mispronounced as "coun." It has been suggested that Shakespeare intends to suggest that she has misheard "foot" as "foutre" (French, "fuck") and "coun" as "con" (French "cunt", also used to mean "idiot"). Similarly John Donne alludes to the obscene meaning of the word without being explicit in his poem The Good-Morrow, referring to sucking on "country pleasures".The 1675 Restoration comedy The Country Wife also features such wordplay, even in its title.
By the 17th century a softer form of the word, "cunny", came into use. A well known use of this derivation can be found in the 25 October 1668 entry of the diary of Samuel Pepys. He was discovered having an affair with Deborah Willet: he wrote that his wife "coming up suddenly, did find me imbracing the girl con my hand sub su coats; and endeed I was with my main in her cunny. I was at a wonderful loss upon it and the girl also....".
Cunny was probably derived from a pun on coney, meaning "rabbit", rather as pussy is connected to the same term for a cat. (Philip Massinger: "A pox upon your Christian cockatrices! They cry, like poulterers' wives, 'No money, no coney.'") Largely because of this usage, the word coney to refer to rabbits changed pronunciation from short "o" (like money and honey) to long "o" (cone, as in Coney Island), and has now almost completely disappeared from most dialects of English; in the same way the word "pussy" is now rarely used in America to refer to a cat.
Robert Burns used the word in his Merry Muses of Caledonia, a collection of bawdy verses which he kept to himself and were not publicly available until the mid-1960s. In "Yon, Yon, Yon, Lassie", this couplet appears: "For ilka birss upon her cunt, Was worth a ryal ransom".
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