Obs. Also succe. [a. F. suc, or ad. L. sūcus SUCCUS. Cf. SUCK sb.3] Juice, sap.
1551. Turner, Herbal, I. F v b. The frenche men seth out of it [sc. the birch tree] a certain iuce or suc [ed. 1568 suck] otherwise called bitumen.
1630. Lennard, trans. Charrons Wisd. (1658), 13. Chyle, that is to say, a kinde of white Suc, fit for the nourishment of the body.
1657. Physical Dict., Succe, juyce, vital moisture either of a plant, or of an humane body.