English edit

Etymology edit

From suck +‎ -itude, or sucky +‎ -tude; modelled after words such as altitude, gratitude, etc.

Pronunciation edit

  • (file)

Noun edit

suckitude (uncountable)

  1. (colloquial, informal) The condition, quality, extent, or measure of how much something or someone sucks; suckiness.
    • 2008, Dr. Denis Leary, Why We Suck:
      To anyone outside of the precious inner sanctum that includes you, your spouse, the kid's grandparents and some of the tiny dimwit's classmates—your kid sucks so bad he or she is a living breathing vacuum of suckitude.
    • 2010, Amanda Marcotte, Get Opinionated:
      Oh, I'm sure Obama intended to do the right thing when he started off, but the Three Principles of Eternal Democratic Suckitude tend to defeat all comers, [...]
    • 2011, Nancy Warren, Face-Off - Page 149:
      TAYLOR McBride let the suckitude of that word hang in the air until his agent nodded. “On ice?” Once more the disdainful tone.

Derived terms edit