Yes, it means ejaculate in the UK.
A friend was at a pub (in the UK) when she was asked her opinion of the beer. She chose to describe it as “spunky.” Hilarity ensued.
I’ve grown up in Minnesota all my life and always heard that term used to describe strength and fortitude. I still hear it used today: “Boy, that kids’ got spunk!”.
Thanks for the enlightenment. I hasten think what people might really have been meaning all this time. Ughh.
It meant “spark” first, in the mid 16th century. The meaning evolved into “spirit” by the late 18th century. It didn’t come to mean “semen” until the late 19th century. Source: The New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary
As far as I understand from fairly varied travels, the State’s is the only English speaking country where it could mean something other than semen - the Aussies have more interesting alternatives than most.
Jees, Primaflora - I think we must swim in very different waters. To the Sydney rugby crowd i spent far to much time with, spunk only meant one thing. Mind you, almost everything meant the same one thing. I suspect you must be a little more refined.
Interesting that it originally derived from “spark” - had no idea.
But the connection is fairly natural. Semen has always been the (literally) seed of life. The Victorian euphemism for orgasm was “to spend,” indicating that one had “spent” one’s “strength.” A lot of rather silly beliefs regarding sex boil down to the idea that too much of it sapped one’s “vital energy” (rather than just being physically exhausting).