English edit

Etymology edit

Blend of kiss +‎ whisper

Pronunciation edit

Noun edit

kissper (plural kisspers)

  1. Close whispering that becomes kissing.
    • 2015 March 1, Lizzie Molyneux & Wendy Molyneux, “The Gayle Tales” (13:27 from the start), in Bob's Burgers[1], season 5, episode 13, spoken by Gene Belcher (Eugene Mirman):
      “That was so good! Oh, I could feel Scott Bakula's kiss whispers in my mouth!” “Kisspers!”
    • 2015 May 5, Julie Young, Ilse Blansert, ASMR[2], Penguin, →ISBN:
      Although her voice is as light as soap bubble and ranges somewhere between a kiss and a whisper (hence the term kissper), her hands are the star of the show. The simplest narrative is coupled with a touch of the hair, a wiggle of a finger, or a twist of the wrist that looks as if she is conjuring a spell.
    • 2017 October 25, Kulpreet Yadav, Murder In Paharganj[3], Bloomsbury Publishing, →ISBN:
      When she began to resist his kissing her ear, Vicks said softly, ‘You said whisper, didn't you?’ His breath on her neck and ear made her want him right there, in the kitchen. But she said, ‘Whisper, not kissper.’

Verb edit

kissper (third-person singular simple present kisspers, present participle kisspering, simple past and past participle kisspered)

  1. To closely whisper which becomes kissing.
    • 2016 May 15, Nora Smith, “The Horse Rider-er” (8:43 from the start), in Bob's Burgers[4], season 6, episode 17, spoken by Tammy Larsen (Jenny Slate):
      “Jeez, Tina, you're such a horse ass kissperer.” “Well, Tammy, I happen to have done many hours of research on the Internet, and on my imaginary horse, Jericho.”