The difference between Sook and Suck
When used as nouns, sook means familiar name for a calf, whereas suck means an instance of drawing something into one's mouth by inhaling.
Sook is also interjection with the meaning: a call for calves.
Suck is also verb with the meaning: to use the mouth and lips to pull in (a liquid, especially milk from the breast).
check bellow for the other definitions of Sook and Suck
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Sook as a verb:
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Sook as a noun (Scotland, rare):
Familiar name for a calf.
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Sook as a noun (US, _, dialectal):
Familiar name for a cow.
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Sook as a noun (Newfoundland):
A cow or sheep.
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Sook as a noun (Australia, New Zealand):
A poddy calf.
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Sook as a noun (Australia, Atlantic Canada, New Zealand, slang, derogatory):
A crybaby, a complainer, a whinger; a shy or timid person, a wimp; a coward.
Examples:
"Don′t be such a sook''."
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Sook as a noun (Australia, Atlantic Canada, New Zealand, slang):
A sulk or complaint; an act of sulking.
Examples:
"I was so upset that I went home and had a sook about it."
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Sook as a noun:
.
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Sook as a noun (US, Eastern Shore of Maryland):
A mature female Chesapeake Bay blue crab, Callinectes sapidus.
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Suck as a noun:
An instance of drawing something into one's mouth by inhaling.
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Suck as a noun (vulgar):
Fellatio of a penis.
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Suck as a noun (Canada):
A weak, self-pitying person; a person who won't go along, especially out of spite; a crybaby or sore loser.
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Suck as a noun:
A sycophant, especially a child.
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Suck as a verb (transitive):
To use the mouth and lips to pull in (a liquid, especially milk from the breast).
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Suck as a verb (intransitive):
To perform such an action; to feed from a breast or teat.
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Suck as a verb (transitive):
To put the mouth or lips to (a breast, a mother etc.) to draw in milk.
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Suck as a verb (transitive):
To extract, draw in (a substance) from or out of something.
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Suck as a verb (transitive):
To work the lips and tongue on (an object) to extract moisture or nourishment; to absorb (something) in the mouth.
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Suck as a verb (transitive):
To pull (something) in a given direction, especially without direct contact.
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Suck as a verb (transitive, slang, vulgar):
To perform fellatio.
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Suck as a verb (chiefly, US, , intransitive, slang):
To be inferior or objectionable: a general term of disparagement, sometimes used with at to indicate a particular area of deficiency.