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Posted
20 hours ago, ErosWired said:

I would suggest that it isn't the consonants that make the difference here as much as the vowels

Never-the-less .... the science of acoustics informs us differently. 

Thanks, as always, for your excellent input.  

Posted

I love all the varying opinions, from personal preferences, cultural differences, and even injecting a little science into the mix. I've always considered "suck my dick" to be what a straight man might normally say while a gay man would more likely say "suck my cock." Because suck my cock sounds more forceful and derogatory, "suck my cock" seems to be more common in both gay and straight porn. In other words, suck my dick seems more polite and less demanding, all things considered.

Personally speaking, whether you tell me to suck your cock or suck your dick, both will get the job done equally well. You want it sucked, I want to suck it, so job done. 😉  BTW, I especially go for the more direct commands like "suck it", "get on your knees", "do your fucking job", and "Swallow!"

Posted
19 minutes ago, hntnhole said:

Never-the-less .... the science of acoustics informs us differently. 

Thanks, as always, for your excellent input.  

Have you tried speaking without using any vowels? Try saying ‘Ccksckr’ out loud - but no vowel sounds whatsoever. The powerful ‘K’ loses much of its power. The consonants only have power because they are pushed by the air moved by the vowels, and the choice of vowel determines the amount of relative power.

In tonal languages, the vowels, rather than the consonants, do the heavy lifting in defining sense and meaning, and in most languages vowels have plenty of character. Take, for instance, the two words in ‘King Kong’ - the consonants are identical, including the ‘K’s, which are behaving just as you describe, but the difference in the relative power snd effect of the vowels becomes evident. So much so, indeed, that the ape is often simply referred to in dread as ‘Kong’ because the ‘O’ denotes more strength and force. Compare ‘King Kong’ with ‘Dick Cock’ structurally. The comparison shows that your observation about the effect of the leading ‘K-sound’ stop consonant is accurate, but it also demonstrates that the ‘O’ has a comparative dominance over the less energetic ‘soft-i’. Your point about the consonants is well taken - but orchestras could not perform with percussion alone.😉 

There is, by the way, some debate in the science of linguistics about the degree to which a familiarity with the phonemic-level elements of a speaker’s native language acts as a kind of neural filter reducing the impact of the acoustic “edges” of an utterance, whereas hearing something spoken in an unfamiliar tongue does not. Here’s a link to an abstract on this; I’m certainly not well versed in it, but I find it interesting:

[think before following links] https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2022.08.17.504234v1

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Posted
43 minutes ago, PissGuzzlerLA said:

suck my dick seems more polite and less demanding,

‘Suck my dick’ seems more polite because it isn’t ‘Suck my dick, faggot’.

Less demanding is: ‘You look like you could use a throatfucking.’

Posted
1 hour ago, ErosWired said:

‘Suck my dick’ seems more polite because it isn’t ‘Suck my dick, faggot’.

Less demanding is: ‘You look like you could use a throatfucking.’

LOL - I love it! A fair point and one I'll gladly embrace. I personally love hearing either one.

  • 2 weeks later...

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