0 past simple and past participle of suck --
1 to pull in liquid or air through your mouth without using your teeth, or to move the tongue and muscles of the mouth around something inside your mouth, often in order to dissolve it: --
2 If someone or something sucks, that person or thing is bad or unpleasant: --
It has been suggested that the size of the sucked streamtube envelope (figure 1) has a similar effect to that of a roughness element, for which many data are available.
The characteristic longitudinal vortices were not predicted and the sucked streamtube now extended between adjacent holes, thereby removing all the boundary layer below a certain height.
He sometimes chewed gum and sucked candies.
So the mobilized member is often 'sucked in' precisely because of the particularist appeal rather than general environmental appeal.
The low-speed critical suction limits are also measured and a design criterion, based on the sucked streamtube characteristics, is established.
Sucked pods were tagged, labelled and monitored daily till they were harvested.
The patient explained that he had felt restlessness in the mouth and chewed gum and sucked candies to relieve this sense of inner restlessness.
People find themselves 'sucked into an argument' - 'we can't talk with each other; we talk to each other'.