Types of erotic kisses, in which it is necessary to lick the tongue of those who kiss down.
*peripetasto\n ka)pimandalwto/n: ei)/dh filhma/twn e)rwtikw=n, e)n w(=| dei= th\n glw=ttan tw=n katafilou/ntwn lei/xein.
At the end of the
Acharnians of
Aristophanes (1200-03), Dicaeopolis comes on stage drunk and supported by a pair of courtesans (whom he addresses in the dual). He has sex on his mind and asks the pair with these rather graphic verbal adjectives for two kisses, apparently for simultaneous oral sex acts to bring him to the arousal necessary for the proposed intercourse (web address 1, followed by web address 2). He asks them to kiss gently, "for I have been the first to drain the (ritual) wine-jar." His fear seems clear enough. As usual in the Suda, the entry assumes that the kisses are mouth-to-mouth (cf.
kappa 912,
kappa 504,
mu 134), but the unusual verb
katafile/w with the prefix kata- 'down', instead of the simple word for kissing, seems to suggest that the writer has misunderstood a reference to oral sex (cf. English 'going down').
The first adjective, a verbal adjective from
peripeta/nnumi (web address 3), is found only here. LSJ translates it as 'spread round or over' and 'lewd'. For the meaning of
mandalwto/s and other "types" of kiss that may be of similar meaning, see
mu 134.
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