Popular Post PissOnMyParade 444 Posted December 8, 2019 Popular Post Share Posted December 8, 2019 (edited) Do you think people should call pee "piss"? Is calling it piss a degrading way to speak about it and therefore a huge turn off on so many levels, or does it heighten the turn on for you because it sounds more sexual? I'm interested to know how the members feel about this. Edited December 10, 2019 by PeeFan 6 Link to post
Popular Post watchr12 1,470 Posted December 8, 2019 Popular Post Share Posted December 8, 2019 I think you'll find that "pee" is merely the sound of the first letter of "piss", so became a more genteel way of implying the act without saying the word itself. It's just another euphemism. 5 Link to post
Sophie 24,276 Posted December 8, 2019 Share Posted December 8, 2019 This isn't a yes or no question 😂 Personally I don't like the word piss. At least not for describing urine, I use it in many other contexts. 2 Link to post
Popular Post steve25805 125,057 Posted December 8, 2019 Popular Post Share Posted December 8, 2019 3 hours ago, PeeFan said: What do you think of people calling pee "piss"? Is it a degrading way to speak about it and therefore a huge turn off on so many levels, or does it heighten the turn on for you because it sounds more sexual? I'm interested to know how the members feel about this. Personally I use "piss" and "pee" interchangeably, but love it when ladies use the word "piss", as in going for a piss. It just sounds so naughty and overt - brazen even - and therefore erotic from a lady. 2 6 1 Link to post
Popular Post Sweets 4,513 Posted December 8, 2019 Popular Post Share Posted December 8, 2019 3 hours ago, PeeFan said: What do you think of people calling pee "piss"? Is it a degrading way to speak about it and therefore a huge turn off on so many levels, or does it heighten the turn on for you because it sounds more sexual? I'm interested to know how the members feel about this. I use them both. If I’m just talking to the straight people (non pee fetish people 😂) I will use pee. But when talking on here and other members off here I use both. Piss a lot in speaking of a sexual fantasy 2 4 Link to post
Popular Post PissingBlonde 887 Posted December 8, 2019 Popular Post Share Posted December 8, 2019 I love piss - when said out loud the hissing sound at the end is so evocative......... But I alternate it with pee for variety and when talking about urinating in a non-sexual context. 1 5 1 Link to post
HitEmAll 1,056 Posted December 8, 2019 Share Posted December 8, 2019 (edited) I am not a native English speaker. I do not particularly dislike the word "piss". So no matter whether a girl announces that she has to "pee" or "piss" like a racehorse, I'll get very excited.. 😅 Edited December 8, 2019 by HitEmAll typo 3 1 Link to post
Popular Post Bacardi 9,990 Posted December 9, 2019 Popular Post Share Posted December 9, 2019 I'll use the word piss in my every day language. But if I'm talking about my fetish I'd prefer to say pee. Idk. The word pee just turns me on more. I guess just because my fetish developed when I was real young and wasn't allowed to say the word "piss." It hits differently. 3 1 1 Link to post
Peefreak99 3,717 Posted December 9, 2019 Share Posted December 9, 2019 I think "pee" sounds better 3 Link to post
Dr.P 1,472 Posted December 9, 2019 Share Posted December 9, 2019 This is a very interesting discussion, with a variety of viewpoints expressed. I agree with Sophie that this isn't a yes or no question. I agree most closely with PissingBlonde, when she says, "I love piss - when said out loud the hissing sound at the end is so evocative........." She is absolutely on point, especially when the word is spoken by a woman, for whom the hissing sound is more likely to be a characteristic of her own bodily process, than it is for a man. I think she has hit on a valid reason for the feelings of men, like steve25805, and myself, who find that "piss" is naughty, overt, brazen, "and therefore erotic, coming from a lady." To me, when a woman refers to her urine or her process as "piss," and/or her process as "pissing," she evokes the sound of her own, personal process, in my mind. It is almost as if she is telling me how her own process sounds, which I find extremely intimate and erotic, precisely because of the evocative hissing sound, at the end of the word. I also agree with PissingBlonde, on the use of "pee" when talking about urinating in a non-sexual context, "But I alternate it with pee for variety and when talking about urinating in a non-sexual context." And I agree with Sweets, on talking with non-fetish people, and follow the same practices as she does, "I use them both. If I’m just talking to the straight people (non pee fetish people ??) I will use pee. But when talking on here and other members off here I use both. Piss a lot in speaking of a sexual fantasy" I make heavy use of "pee," as an alternative to "piss," in my erotic stories and other writings on this site, because I am keenly aware of the negative connotations associated with using "piss," and I don't want to alienate potential readers, or make the dialog in my stories unbelievable, within the conventions of more traditional society. As an example, here is an excerpt from my fictional story of "Marcia" Part 0, posted on 11/16/19: "Although I loved hearing her say "piss," I didn't want her to be looked upon as crude or gross, among speakers of English, particularly Western women. So I gently warned her about the use of the word, "piss," by women, in the West. "Ingven nieu-wrzen bu shaw "piss" ingwei hun tooh! Nieu-wrzen shaw "pee," hao." ("In English, women don't say "piss," because it's very crude. It's OK for women to say "pee.") "Sheh-sheh," ("Thanks,") she answered." So I totally agree that this is not a simple, yes or no, question, and some of its implications can be complicated. It will be interesting to see more opinions. Dr.P 2 1 Link to post
wettingman 545 Posted December 9, 2019 Share Posted December 9, 2019 For the most part I much prefer the word pee over piss, because piss seems course almost ( but not quite) vulgar. Similarly I use dick rather than cock to describe my penis. I do use piss on occasion to keep from being redundant or if pee just sounds clumsy in the sentence. I guess I am old school. I was taught growing up that these were wrong, and some of that stuck. I literally thought fuck was a new word in 1966, the year I entered high school. Such was my young life. But that is just me speaking. I have no issue if people use piss, or using their pussy or cock to piss. 2 Link to post
speedy3471 10,651 Posted December 9, 2019 Share Posted December 9, 2019 I use piss most of the time. Sometimes I will say pee but not very often 4 Link to post
Popular Post beachmom 1,807 Posted December 10, 2019 Popular Post Share Posted December 10, 2019 (edited) In Europe the word "piss" is more common and doesn't get as much of a negative reaction as in America, because it is the base for other related words such as "Pissor" (uninal) or "piscine" (pool). Americans seem to make up new, less offensive words for everything, women are especially guilty of this "pee, pee-pee, potty, wee-wee, it could go on forever. Myself, I think piss is perfectly acceptable, especially coming from Men, where anything else makes them appear wimpy. Edited December 10, 2019 by beachmom duplication 2 2 1 Link to post
Popular Post Starks2010 2,176 Posted December 10, 2019 Popular Post Share Posted December 10, 2019 I like the term piss. It sounds stronger, especially out of a females mouth. My ex would say she had to piss and I’d instantly get hard. 2 5 Link to post
Dr.P 1,472 Posted December 10, 2019 Share Posted December 10, 2019 beachmom makes some good points, with which I agree, "In Europe the word "piss" is more common and doesn't get as much of a negative reaction as in America, because it is the base for other related words such as "Pissor" (uninal) or "piscine" (pool). Americans seem to make up new, less offensive words for everything, women are especially guilty of this "pee, pee-pee, potty, wee-wee, it could go on forever. Myself, I think piss is perfectly acceptable, especially coming from Men, where anything else makes them appear wimpy." I grew up in a European-American community, in the Midwestern US, in the middle of the 20th Century, and my experiences were very similar to those of beachmom. My sisters, female friends, and girlfriends, in my youth, mostly said "piss," or sometimes "pee," right along with the guys. My mother disapproved, and admonished all of us to use euphemisms, such as those listed by beachmom. My mom's favorite was "wee-wee," which she used, all the time. I totally agree with beachmom that the American obsession with creating euphemisms for bodily functions is excessive. My least favorite, for women's peeing, currently in wide use, by women of my generation, is "Go to the little girls' room," which I find not only juvenile, and "cutesy," but almost creepy, when used by women in their 50's, 60's, and 70's. "Go potty" is another, very similar expression, also in current wide use. A Platonic woman friend of mine, who grew up in Northern Europe, uses the "little girls" euphemism, exclusively, when she needs to pee. So the American obsession for supposedly less offensive words has predominated over her more relaxed and practical European upbringing. Dr.P 1 Link to post
Deanna Lydia 81 Posted December 11, 2019 Share Posted December 11, 2019 I love to pee in my pants, and I love to piss in my pants. If one or the other word is more degrading, I like it for that reason since I feel very degraded and humiliated when I pee/piss my pants. When I was younger, I always thought "wet my pants" was degrading/humiliating - but then, no matter what it's called, sitting in urine-soaked pants and just hanging out and enjoying it is degrading enough that I think the words should fit how I feel. 😉 1 Link to post
PissingBlonde 887 Posted December 11, 2019 Share Posted December 11, 2019 Thank you to @Dr.P and @beachmom for articulating this so well. I personally find euphemisms like 'wee wee' and 'little girl's room' creepy and infantile (especially when used excessively) but language is such an intimate and individual thing... it may be exactly these aspects that appeal to others depending on personal preference and when their fetish was formed. It's wonderful how we all have our own way of loving pee! 1 1 2 Link to post
Gotah 2,373 Posted December 11, 2019 Share Posted December 11, 2019 I always felt like "piss" emphasized the act of urination more than "pee". I like to use both but always preferred "pee" since it sounds more gentle and I kinda also feel a bit more comfortable saying it. However, the only time I use the word "piss" is when either I *really* need to go or when I write a story where the character is super desperate since, at least for me, it feels and sounds more "extreme" and, like I just said, emphasizes the desperation and the urge way more than "pee". 2 1 Link to post
Dr.P 1,472 Posted December 11, 2019 Share Posted December 11, 2019 Pissing Blonde, "Thank you to @Dr.P and @beachmom for articulating this so well." Thank you very much for setting the discussion up so well, pointing out the evocative alliteration of the hissing sound at the end of the word piss! I have never heard that connotation expressed by a woman (or a man, for that matter!), before, although I have thought it privately, for many years. I appreciate your openness in expressing this. Thanks again! "I personally find euphemisms like 'wee wee' and 'little girl's room' creepy and infantile (especially when used excessively) but language is such an intimate and individual thing... it may be exactly these aspects that appeal to others depending on personal preference and when their fetish was formed." Excellent point! I hadn't thought of euphemisms in that context, before, but of course it is true. And in fact, I have an example from my own past experience, which I think may illustrate your point, very well. "Lisa," one of my long term, "wet" gf's, used the common female euphemism "go," when she wanted to pee. Although I don't know how she came to use that term, in her previous life, she used it almost exclusively, with me, when we were together. But the fun part was not in the term itself, but in the way she expressed it, the emphasis in her voice, as well as in her face and body language. When she said "I have to GO!" to me, I quickly learned to take that sentence as a very erotic invitation to join her in the bathroom, or wherever else she had chosen to "GO!" So I totally agree with you when you say, "It's wonderful how we all have our own way of loving pee!" Dr.P 1 1 Link to post
Scot_Lover 1,833 Posted December 11, 2019 Share Posted December 11, 2019 I tend not to use either, just say I'm going potty. Maigh, on the other hand, will use pee when she's out and about, and she will use piss when she's hot and sexy. When she says "I want to piss all over you, laddie” in her sweet Scot accent, I can never say no, lol. 1 2 Link to post
oliver2 4,311 Posted December 11, 2019 Share Posted December 11, 2019 On 12/10/2019 at 1:27 AM, beachmom said: In Europe the word "piss" is more common and doesn't get as much of a negative reaction as in America, because it is the base for other related words such as "Pissor" (uninal) or "piscine" (pool). Americans seem to make up new, less offensive words for everything, women are especially guilty of this "pee, pee-pee, potty, wee-wee, it could go on forever. Myself, I think piss is perfectly acceptable, especially coming from Men, where anything else makes them appear wimpy. In German, “pissen” is more or less used for “peeing”. There is “pipi”, in French, which is more or less “pee”. I’m not a cunning enough linguist to get all the connotations. “Piscine” is most likely from Latin “piscina” - fishpond, like Pisces or pescatarian, not because it’s a big pool that you piss in. Even though you do, and there’s no fish in it. 😂 2 Link to post
Mkbigboy 179 Posted December 22, 2019 Share Posted December 22, 2019 Sometimes when I’m out with the boys I’ll say I gotta go for a piss or “Boys I gotta take a slash” 2 Link to post
Ms. Tito 2,283 Posted March 28, 2020 Share Posted March 28, 2020 On 12/9/2019 at 8:27 PM, beachmom said: In Europe the word "piss" is more common and doesn't get as much of a negative reaction as in America, because it is the base for other related words such as "Pissor" (uninal) or "piscine" (pool). Americans seem to make up new, less offensive words for everything, women are especially guilty of this "pee, pee-pee, potty, wee-wee, it could go on forever. Myself, I think piss is perfectly acceptable, especially coming from Men, where anything else makes them appear wimpy. Pissor? What language is that? I know Pissuar/Pisoar/Pisaonici is "urinal" in East Slavic languages 1 Link to post
oliver2 4,311 Posted March 28, 2020 Share Posted March 28, 2020 15 hours ago, Ms. Tito said: Pissor? What language is that? I know Pissuar/Pisoar/Pisaonici is "urinal" in East Slavic languages In French I think it is “Pissoir” with an i (also with a p) 1 Link to post
removedunknown 211 Posted March 29, 2020 Share Posted March 29, 2020 On 12/10/2019 at 12:45 AM, speedy3471 said: I use piss most of the time. Sometimes I will say pee but not very often Since you always say "piss" in German, I use the word in English too. I think, the word expresses a certain force, and that I feel also in the act of pissing itself. 2 Link to post
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now