It isn’t so “Family” anymore.

Without many taking notice, “Family Feud,” the 39-year-old daytime favorite, became a raunchy adult party game full of dirty double entendres.

Actually, make that single entendres: A lot of the banter consists of undisguised sexual references.

In September, host Steve Harvey asked a guest named Kevin to name the last thing he stuck his finger in. “My wife,” said Kevin. Harvey called that “my favorite answer of all time.”

“Name the first part of a woman you touch to get her in the mood,” Harvey asked a guest named Larry on Sept. 28.

“Um, that would be the lower front or the vagina,” the guest replied, then added, “I didn’t want to say it.”

“Yeah, down there on the prairie!” Harvey cried. “Down there by the promised land!”

A Deadspin writer pointed out that “Family Feud” is “a parade of repressed sexual thoughts. For any given question, someone will give a sex-related answer. It never fails. It’s almost as if backstage before the show, the producers are conducting all kinds of suggestive mind-control tricks along the lines of, ‘Whatever you do, don’t think of a pink elephant,’ except in this case it’s, ‘Don’t say penis, or breasts, or name any sex act.’ ”

Gosh, why would anyone have a sexual thought when given a question like “Name something you put in your mouth but don’t swallow”?

Or, “Give me a word a married man would use to fill in the blank: I would ‘blank’ for sex”?

Or, “Name something that has white balls”? (The No. 6 answer was “White dudes.”)

Or, “Name something a man might have in his pants when he’s going on a hot date”?

“This may be inappropriate, but maybe he’s excited to go on his date? I guess I have to be more specific, don’t I? Boner,” replied contestant McKenzi in a 2012 clip that has attracted more than 3 million views. “You can say that on TV?” replied Harvey in mock disbelief — as if the show weren’t being built around smutty answers.

“Name something a doctor might pull out of a person” elicited the answer “A gerbil.”

An older man named Gene, when asked to name something that has to be licked, said “A woman.”

“If someone’s in the bathroom more than five minutes, name something they might be doing” elicited, from contestant Megan (a third-grade, religious-education teacher!), the answer, “Playing with yourself.”

Remember when you had to wait till 11 p.m. if you wanted to attempt a dirty joke on TV? In New York City, “Family Feud” airs at 11 and 11:30 a.m., on Channel 9.

Hey, your toddlers have to learn about sex eventually. Why put it off?