Question for discussion.--liquid words

Picking up the thread.

Since discussion has tailed off at AH, I post the revised list and invite those here to discuss which they use, and how, and which are not to be used (cliche's etc.).

How often and how do you use
any of the following and derived verbs, adjectives, nouns:


Wet, sopping, drip, dripping, dribble, trickle, squirt, spurt, spray, splash, douse, rush, run, leak, ooze, shoot, gush, pour, stream, flow, emit, discharge, torrent, river, flood, fountain, soak, spill, puddle

Additions from the persons named below* (5/1): seep, secrete, rivulet, weep, damp, saturated, drench, deluge, downpour, splatter, misted. Related category--slick, slippery.

Additions by pure (5/1): swamp, inundate, souse, bathe, wash, [[drizzle,]] sprinkle, shower, spit, boggy, slimy, dank, sloppy, water (v), watery, drown, spout, efflux, effusion, sluice, well (n,v), overflow, drop, droplet, tear (water), fluid

ADDITIONS by dr mabeuse
ejaculate, erupt, eruct, jet, spew, spend, juice, drain

And mabeuse's words which apply to high-viscosity or thixotropic liquids (ha! Look that one up!, says the dr.)

Viscous, viscid, syrupy, strand, exude (and exudate), secrete,oleaginous{oily, buttery}, mucoid
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If you have other favorites, volunteer them.
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*THANKS TO THESE AND ALL OTHERS WHO CONTRIBUTED:
neonlyte, ladyjeanne, ibhard, selenakittyn, colleen, fallingtofly

THANKS TO DR MABEUSE FOR HIS VISCID SPILL INTO THIS LIST.
 
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What a weird topic, Pure! And you didn't even include some of the faves I posted in the AH for the act of ejaculation:

ejaculate
erupt
eruct
jet
spew
inundate
spill
spend
inundate
regurgitate
juice
drain

Or my words which apply not so much to liquids by to high-viscosity or thixotropic liquids (ha! Look that one up!)

Viscous,
viscid
syrupy
strand
exude (and exudate)
secrete
oleaginous
mucoid

Many others

Some years ago I read a book in which some guy put his hand down a girl's panties and feeling her "wet, swampy, cunt", and that phrase just stuck in my mind. That "swampy," with its connotation not only of wet and viscous, but humid and fertile and dangerous and mysterious, has always stuck with me. Like you can almost sense the snakes crawling out of her panties.
 
i like 'swampy' a lot, too!

thanks for adding those suggestions; one quibble--i don't think eruct belongs on the list, since it's usually gases or gases+matter.
 
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