pissing

pissing — verb

1. to release waste liquid from the body through the penis or vagina, using a word

1.動詞不及物B2
釋義

to release waste liquid from the body through the penis or vagina, using a word that most people consider rude or impolite

例句

A drunk man was pissing against the wall behind the bar.

piss + preposition (against) for location

Tuan ran to the toilet because he really needed to piss.

intransitive — no object needed

同義詞
  • urinate

    formal or medical term; the only polite choice in professional or public contexts

  • pee

    child-friendly or casual euphemism; not considered offensive

  • wee

    chiefly British, child-friendly; even milder than 'pee'

  • take a leak

    informal slang, but less offensive than 'piss'; common in casual conversation

文法句型

piss + preposition (in/on/against/into)

用法筆記

This word is considered vulgar and offensive in many social situations. In polite conversation, use 'urinate' (formal/medical), 'go to the toilet', or 'pee' (child-friendly or casual). The noun form 'a piss' (e.g. 'have a piss', 'go for a piss') is equally vulgar.

常見錯誤

I need to piss' (said to a boss or stranger).
I need to use the restroom.
💡'piss' is too rude for formal or public situations; choose a neutral or polite alternative.
I pissed at the toilet' (location error).
I pissed in the toilet.' or 'He pissed against the wall.
💡use the correct preposition for the target surface.

2. to lose control of your bladder and release urine into your clothes, typically f

2.動詞及物B2
釋義

to lose control of your bladder and release urine into your clothes, typically from fear, laughter, or a sudden shock

例句

The horror movie was so terrifying that Adisa nearly pissed himself.

reflexive: piss + himself

The comedian's jokes were so funny that Quinn pissed her pants laughing.

collocation: piss + possessive + pants

同義詞
  • wet oneself

    neutral informal term for losing bladder control; far less offensive than 'piss oneself'

  • wet one's pants

    common euphemism, especially used with children

文法句型

piss + reflexive pronoun (yourself/himself/herself)

piss + possessive + pants/trousers

用法筆記

This sense always uses a reflexive object (yourself/himself/herself/themselves) or a possessive + clothing noun (your pants/his trousers). It does not mean simply urinating — it specifically describes an accidental loss of bladder control. The same vulgarity warning applies as in sense 1.

常見錯誤

He pissed during the movie' (unclear — could mean sense 1).
He pissed himself during the movie.
💡the reflexive object is required for this sense, otherwise it sounds like sense 1 (going to the toilet).