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  1. to pull in liquid or air through your mouth without using your teeth, or to move the tongue and muscles of the mouth around something inside your mouth, often in order to dissolve it: She was sitting on the grass sucking lemonade through a straw. I sucked my thumb until I was seven. I tried sucking (on) a mint to stop myself coughing.

  2. The meaning of SUCK is to draw (something, such as liquid) into the mouth through a suction force produced by movements of the lips and tongue. How to use suck in a sentence.

  3. Suck definition: to draw into the mouth by producing a partial vacuum by action of the lips and tongue. See examples of SUCK used in a sentence.

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  5. to draw (liquid) into the mouth by creating a vacuum or partial vacuum with the lips, cheeks, and tongue. b. to draw up (water, oil, etc.) by the action of a pump. 2. to take up or in by or as by sucking; absorb, inhale, etc. to suck air into the lungs. 3. to suck liquid from (a breast, fruit, etc.) 4.

  6. to get from somebody/something all the money, help, information, etc. they have, usually giving nothing in return. By earning millions from racing and giving pennies back, the bookmakers are sucking the sport dry.

  7. to have something in your mouth and use your tongue, lips, etc to pull on it or to get liquid, air, etc out of it: to suck a sweet / lollipop. to suck your thumb. suck sth in/under/up, etc. to pull something somewhere using the force of moving air, water, etc: He was sucked under the boat and drowned. be sucked into sth.

  8. suck (suk), v.t. to draw into the mouth by producing a partial vacuum by action of the lips and tongue: to suck lemonade through a straw. to draw (water, moisture, air, etc.) by or as if by suction: Plants suck moisture from the earth. The pump sucked water from the basement.

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