douche
See also: douché
English
Etymology
Borrowed from French douche (“shower”), from Italian doccia (“shower”). Sense 3 from douche bag.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /duːʃ/
- Rhymes: -uːʃ
Audio (UK) (file)
Noun
douche (plural douches)
- A jet or current of water or vapour directed upon some part of the body to benefit it medicinally; in particular, such a jet directed at the vagina for vaginal irrigation.
- 1892 Robert Ottiwell Gifford-Bennet, Buxton and its Medicinal Waters, London: John Heywood,
- Massage, or kneading of the whole body, is carried out in this bath after which a steam douche or a warm spray is turned upon the affected parts, according to the nature of the case.
- 1898 Selma Lagerlöf (trans. Pauline Bancroft Flach), The Story of Gösta Berling, Boston: Little, Brown, and Company, Part II, Chapter I, p. 249
- Earth, the great mother, begins to live. Romping like a child she rises from her bath in the spring floods, from her douche in the spring rain.
- 1973 Jaroslav Hašek (trans. Cecil Parrott), The Good Soldier Švejk, London: William Heinemann, Chapter 4, p. 32,
- In the bathroom they immersed him in a tub of warm water, and then pulled him out and put him under a cold douche.
- 1892 Robert Ottiwell Gifford-Bennet, Buxton and its Medicinal Waters, London: John Heywood,
- Something that produces the jet or current in the previous sense, such as a syringe.
- (slang, derogatory) A contemptible person; a worthless, brainless or disgusting person (earlier douche bag).
- 1991 Anthrax, "Startin' Up a Posse", from album Attack of the Killer B's (song lyrics)
- You say our records are offensive, (You're a douche, you're a douche.)
- 1991 Anthrax, "Startin' Up a Posse", from album Attack of the Killer B's (song lyrics)
Derived terms
Derived terms
Related terms
Translations
a jet or current of water or vapour directed upon some part of the body to benefit it medicinally
Verb
douche (third-person singular simple present douches, present participle douching, simple past and past participle douched)
- To administer a douche to; to shower; to douse
- 1926, D. H. Lawrence, The Plumed Serpent, New York: Knopf, Chapter II,
- […] a frizzy half-white woman who looked as if she had fallen into a flour-sack, her face was so deep in powder, and her frizzy hair and her brown silk dress so douched with the white dust of it.
- 1938, Xavier Herbert, Capricornia, Chapter VI, p. 81,
- Mrs. McLash's anger was gone completely, douched not nearly so much by the beer as by this attention to her son.
- 1992, Edna O'Brien, Time and Tide, New York: Farrar Straus Giroux, Chapter 9, p. 66,
- The boxes would reek of the smell of rich plum cake, with brandy or sherry douched over it.
- 2007, Valerie Allen, On Farting: Language and Laughter in the Middle Ages, New York: Palgrave MacMillan, p. 153,
- Tragedy acts then like a laxative […] or an aperient […] to douche our systems of humors and emotions that unbalance the soul, so that we may return to the virtuous golden mean, to homeostatic equilibrium.
- 1926, D. H. Lawrence, The Plumed Serpent, New York: Knopf, Chapter II,
- To use a douche.
Dutch
Etymology
Borrowed from French douche (“shower”), from Italian doccia (“shower”). See also does (“shower head”).
Pronunciation
Audio (file)
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /duʃ/
audio (file)
Verb
douche
Descendants
See also
Derived terms
- douche vaginale
Further reading
- “douche” in le Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Norman
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