A waste pipe that carries away sewage or surface water.
1Only think of that cloaca being supplied daily with such dainty bibliographical treasures!
2The outlet is sometimes called the branchial pore, and sometimes the cloaca or ejection-aperture.
3My Borromean chain had been pulled, and I was sliding down the cloaca maxima.
4Its throbbing intensified and a low growl resonated up and down the intestine-like cloaca.
5They take their name from the cloaca which they share with all the lower Vertebrates.
6This great cloaca was the work of Tarquinius Superbus.
7What is the cloaca in the egg-laying animals?
8These are then ejected with the breathing-water through the cloaca (q), and so "born alive."
9However, he's so smitten with Sugar that, to be honest, he'd willingly follow her into the rankest cloaca.
10It infected domestic chickens, resulting in seroconversion and intermittent virus excretion via cloaca and oropharynx under experimental conditions.
11No wonder that, in one of their dispatches, they speak of Rome as the cloaca of the world.
12This cloaca is the common outlet for the passage of the excrements, the urine, and the sexual products.
13Both open behind into the cloaca.
14The Rome of John X was a cloaca in which the Popes set the example of the worst misconduct.
15How have you gathered all the minor sewers into one cloaca maxima, and discharged the whole upon my innocent head!
16It lies near the middle line, directly under the primitive vertebral column, and reaches from the cardiac region to the cloaca.