The difference between Pigmeat and Pork
When used as nouns, pigmeat means the meat or flesh of a pig, used especially for food, whereas pork means the meat of a pig.
Pork is also verb with the meaning: to have sex with (someone).
check bellow for the other definitions of Pigmeat and Pork
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Pigmeat as a noun:
The meat or flesh of a pig, used especially for food; pork.
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Pork as a noun (uncountable):
The meat of a pig; swineflesh.
Examples:
"The cafeteria serves pork on Tuesdays."
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Pork as a noun (US, politics, slang, pejorative):
Funding proposed or requested by a member of Congress for special interests or his or her constituency as opposed to the good of the country as a whole.
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Pork as a verb (transitive, slang, vulgar, usually, of a male):
To have sex with (someone).
Examples:
"[[w:Animal House Animal House]]'', Universal Pictures, 1978:<br/> Boon: Marlene! Don't tell me you're gonna pork Marlene Desmond!<br/>Otter: Pork?<br/>Boon: You're gonna hump her brains out, aren't you?<br/>Otter: Boon, I anticipate a deeply religious experience."