copulate+with
11lie with — 1. to copulate with It has long been assumed that the adult male and female cannot lie in each other s company without copulating, within or outside marriage: To tell thee plain, I aim to lie with thee. (Shakespeare, 3 Henry V7 ) Lie …
12shack up (with someone) — 1. in. to have a one night stand with someone; to copulate [with] someone. □ Those two just wanted to shack up for a while. □ He only wanted to shack up with me. 2. in. to move in with someone temporarily, pre umably for sexual purposes. □ They …
13be with — to copulate with Of either sex, usually extramaritally and in the past tense. Also, of males, as be into: The girl talked. We know you ve been with her. (Mailer, 1965) He had never been into a girl either. (Bradbury, 1975) Been… …
14compound with — obsolete to copulate with Literally, to mingle with: My father compounded with my mother under the dragon s tail. (Shakespeare, King Lear) …
15go to bed with — to copulate with Of either sex, and of homosexuality, although not necessarily in or on a bed: Years ago she had gone to bed with him for a few weeks. (Amis, 1978 you might suppose they were a pair of invalids) The idea of going to… …
16live with — to copulate with Perhaps the commonest usage: You lived with women. You lived with that old actress. (I. Murdoch, 1978) Also of homosexual relationships …
17go with — to copulate with outside a permanent relationship More often used of women than men despite the reciprocity: [Keeler] hurt [Rachman] terribly when she went with other men. (S. Green, 1979) …
18hit the sack with — to copulate with To hit the sack or hay means no more than to go to bed on your own: ... blame a Colonel for hitting the sack with a hooker. (Ustinov, 1971) …
19make sweat with — to copulate with There are many other communal activities which increase the body temperature of the joint participants, such as a singles at tennis on a hot day: He thought his body would still smell from the sweat he made with the… …
20move in with — to cohabit and copulate with Not of a married couple changing residences: As to his moving in with you, all I ll say is that some of the folks round here are a little old fashioned. (N. Evans, 1998) …