The Collaborative International Dictionary
Swive \Swive\, v. t. [OE. swiven, fr. AS. sw[=i]fan. See
Swivel.]
To copulate with (a woman). [Obs.]
--Chaucer.
Wiktionary
vb. 1 (context transitive English) To copulate with (a woman). 2 (context transitive dialectal English) To cut a crop in a sweeping or rambling manner, hence to reap; cut for harvest.
Usage examples of "swive".
Danlo smiled as he remembered a story he had heard about Bardo: that the huge, prepotent man had once swived nineteen women in a single night.
Bardo: that the huge, prepotent man had once swived nineteen women in a single night.
Harold, I'd far liefer be cauld clay, worm-food, than end me days an old, doddering, toothless mon as could eat nothing save gruel and syllabubs, all me strength gone and unable to properly swive even the youngest, bonniest, liveliest girl.
The Sassenach, His Grace of Norfolk, it was, took her flo'er, and nae man has swived her since, this she swears by the Rood.
He should have just swived her in the stable, but he’d fornicated in enough places to know his lousy pile of straw wasn’t thick and well stacked enough to protect her royal behind during the crucial moments.
His wife stayed on their other lands in Hungary while the count merrily swived every unmarried peasant girl in the village, and did this somehow without a bit of complaint from their parents!
Harold, I'd far liefer be cauld clay, wormfood, than end me days an old, doddering, toothless mon as could eat nothing save gruel and syllabubs, all me strength gone and unable to properly swive even the youngest, bonniest, liveliest girl.