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12353 savar [[Ido]] [Synonyms] - konocar [Verb] savar (present tense savas, past tense savis, future tense savos, imperative savez, conditional savus) 1.(transitive) to know (by learning) [[Kurdish]] [Etymology] From Armenian ձաւար (jawar). [Noun] savar (Arabic spelling ساڤار) 1.groats [[Swedish]] [Verb] savar 1.present tense of sava. 0 0 2012/01/24 19:10
12354 majora [[Latin]] [Adjective] maiora 1.nominative neuter of maior 2.accusative neuter of maior 3.vocative neuter of maior 0 0 2012/01/24 11:16 2012/01/24 19:11
12356 cum [[English]] ipa :/kʌm/[Anagrams] - MUC, UMC [Etymology 1] From Latin cum (“with”). [Etymology 2] Variant of come. [[Anglo-Norman]] [Conjunction] cum 1.as 2.like [[Aromanian]] [Adverb] cum 1.how [Conjunction] cum 1.how [Etymology] From Vulgar Latin *quomo, from Latin quomodo. [[Irish]] ipa :[kuːmˠ][Etymology] From Old Irish cummaid [Verb] cum 1.to form, shape 2.to compose 3.to devise 4.to invent 5.to limit, ration [[Latin]] ipa :/kum/[Conjunction] cum (+ subjunctive) 1.when 2.because 3.although [Etymology] From Proto-Indo-European *kom (“next to, at, with, along”). Cognate with German ge- (“with”, collective prefix) and gegen (“toward, against”), English gain-, Russian ко (ko, “to”). [Preposition] cum (+ ablative) 1.with Titus cum familiā habitat. — "Titus lives with his family." magna cum laude — "with great praise." [[Lojban]] [Rafsi] cum 1.Rafsi of cumki. [[Manx]] [Verb] cum (verbal noun cummal) 1.to grip, hold 2.to keep, arrest, retain 3.to contain 4.to live, inhabit 5.to celebrate [[Old French]] [Conjunction] cum 1.Alternative form of conme. [[Rohingya]] [Etymology] From Bengali. [Noun] cum 1.kiss [[Romanian]] ipa :[kum][Adverb] cum 1.how Cum ți-ar plăcea cafeaua? How would you like your coffee? Nu știu cum să spun "how" în românește I don't know how to say "how" in Romanian. [Conjunction] cum 1.how 2.as, since, because [Etymology] From Vulgar Latin *quomo, from Latin quomodo. [[Scots]] ipa :/kʌm/[Verb] cum 1.to come [[Scottish Gaelic]] ipa :/kʰuːm/[Alternative forms] - cùm [Etymology 1] [Etymology 2] 0 0 2012/01/24 13:04 2012/01/24 19:16
12358 clit [[English]] ipa :/klɪt/[Etymology] First attested circa 1960s, slang abbreviation from clitoris. [Noun] clit (plural clits) 1.(slang) The clitoris 0 0 2012/01/25 05:59 2012/01/25 05:59
12362 brit [[English]] ipa :/bɹɪt/[Etymology 1] From Middle English brytten, brutten, from Old English brittian, bryttian (“to divide, dispense, distribute, rule over, possess, enjoy the use of”), from Proto-Germanic *brutjanan (“to break, divide”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰreud- (“to break”). Cognate with Icelandic brytja (“to chop up, break in pieces, slaughter”), Swedish bryta (“to break, fracture, cut off”), Danish bryde (“to break”). Related to Old English brytta (“dispenser, giver, author, governor, prince”), Old English brēotan (“to break in pieces, hew down, demolish, destroy, kill”). [Etymology 2] Probably from bret or birt, applied to a different kind of fish. See bret. [Etymology 3] Short for brit milah. 0 0 2012/01/25 06:04 2012/01/25 06:04
12364 britt [[Swedish]] [Noun] britt c. 1.Briton; an inhabitant of Great Britain 0 0 2012/01/25 06:05 2012/01/25 06:05
12366 Proto-Indo-European [[English]] [Adjective] Proto-Indo-European (not comparable) 1.(linguistics, anthropology) Of or pertaining to the Proto-Indo-European language, or the people who spoke it. [Proper noun] Proto-Indo-European (countable and uncountable; plural Proto-Indo-Europeans) 1.(linguistics, uncountable) The hypothetical ancestor language or protolanguage of most European and Indian languages. 2.(anthropology, countable) A person who spoke the Proto-Indo-European language. [Related terms] - European - Indian - Indo-European language family - proto- 0 0 2012/01/25 06:46
12367 proto [[English]] [Adjective] proto (not comparable) 1.Prototypical; preceding the proper beginning of something 2.2007 March 11, Horacio Silva, “Muscle Man”: […] he photographed his tenant, the proto male supermodel Matt Collins, for Italian Harper’s Bazaar. [Anagrams] - troop [[Czech]] [Adverb] proto 1.therefore; that is why 0 0 2010/06/02 00:13 2012/01/25 06:47
12369 lust [[English]] ipa :/lʌst/[Anagrams] - slut - UTSL [Etymology] Old English lust (“lust, pleasure, longing”), from Proto-Germanic *lustuz. Akin to Old Saxon, Dutch lust, Old Frisian, Old High German, German Lust, & Swedish lust, Danish lyst & Icelandic lyst, Old Norse losti, Gothic lustus, and perhaps to Sanskrit lush "to desire", or to English loose. Confer list (“to please”), listless. [Noun] lust (uncountable) 1.A feeling of strong desire, especially of a sexual nature. Upon seeing Kim, I was filled with lust. 2.(archaic) A general want or longing not necessarily sexual or devious. The boarders hide their lust to go home. 3.(archaic) A delightful cause of joy, pleasure. An ideal son is his father's lasting lust. [Verb] lust (third-person singular simple present lusts, present participle lusting, simple past and past participle lusted) 1.(intransitive) To very strongly desire. 2.To crave sexual contact urgently. [[Dutch]] ipa :-ʏst[Noun] lust c. (plural lusten, diminutive lustje) 1.lust, desire (especially sexual) 2.pleasure, joy Het was een lust om naar hem te kijken en te luisteren. It was a pleasure watching and listening to him. 3.benefit, advantage [Verb] lust 1.first-, second- and third-person singular present indicative of lusten. 2.imperative of lusten. [[Old English]] [Noun] lust m. 1.desire, pleasure, appetite, lust Him wæs metes micel lust: he had a craving for food. (Ælfric's Homilies) [[Swedish]] [Noun] lust c. 1.(uncountable) lust (a mood of desire), joy, a keen interest jag har ingen lust att läsa idag I don't feel like reading today 2.a desire (for something specific) 0 0 2012/01/25 06:53 2012/01/25 06:54
12371 skype [[English]] [Anagrams] - pesky [Usage notes] Skype is a trademark of Skype Limited. [Verb] skype (third-person singular simple present skypes, present participle skyping, simple past and past participle skyped) 1.(transitive, computing) To make a Skype telephone call. 2.(transitive, computing) To send a file with Skype. 0 0 2012/01/25 06:59 2012/01/25 07:00
12372 sabo [[Venetian]] [Etymology] Compare Italian sabato [Noun] Venetian Wikipedia has an article on:SaboWikipedia vecsabo m. (plural sabi) 1.Saturday 0 0 2012/01/25 07:01
12374 sabotage [[English]] [Etymology] From French sabotage (verb is from the noun) [Noun] sabotage (uncountable) 1.A deliberate action aimed at weakening an enemy through subversion, obstruction, disruption, and/or destruction. 2.(military) An act or acts with intent to injure, interfere with, or obstruct the national defense of a country by willfully injuring or destroying, or attempting to injure or destroy, any national defense or war materiel, premises, or utilities, to include human and natural resources[1]. [References] 1.^ JP 1-02 Department of Defense Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms. [See also] - terrorism [Verb] sabotage (third-person singular simple present sabotages, present participle sabotaging, simple past and past participle sabotaged) 1.to deliberately destroy or damage something in order to prevent it from being successful The railway line had been sabotaged by enemy commandos [[French]] ipa :/sa.bɔ.taʒ/[Etymology] saboter +‎ -age [Noun] sabotage m. (plural sabotages) 1.sabotage [[Swedish]] [Noun] sabotage n. 1.sabotage 0 0 2012/01/25 07:01 2012/01/25 07:01
12375 buta [[French]] [Anagrams] - tuba [Verb] buta 1.third-person singular past historic of buter [[Hiligaynon]] [Adjective] butá 1.blind butâ 1.charged, full, replenished [Noun] butá 1.blind [Verb] bútà 1.To charge or replenish. [[Hungarian]] ipa :/ˈbutɒ/[Adjective] buta (comparative butább, superlative legbutább) 1.stupid, silly, foolish, dumb [Antonyms] - okos [Etymology] Of unknown origin. [[Indonesian]] [Adjective] buta 1.blind [[Japanese]] [Noun] buta (hiragana ぶた) 1.豚: a pig 0 0 2012/01/25 07:16
12379 buttock [[English]] ipa :/ˈbʌ.tək/[Etymology] Probably from Old English buttuc (“end, short piece of land”), attested since circa 1300, presumed cognate with butt. [Noun] buttock (plural buttocks) 1.(usually in the plural) Each of the two large fleshy halves of the posterior part of the body between the base of the back and the top of the legs. [Synonyms] - asscheek (crude) - butt-cheek - cheek - ham - mound - (plurale tantum) hurdies pl. - See also Wikisaurus:buttocks 0 0 2012/01/25 07:17 2012/01/25 07:17
12381 buttocks [[English]] ipa :/ˈbʌɾəks/[Noun] buttocks 1.Plural form of buttock. 2.1707, Thomas Brown, "Moll Quarles's Answer to Mother Creswell of Famous Memory" in The Second Volume of the Works of Mr. Tho. Brown, containing Letters from the Dead to the Living both Serious and Comical, part three, page 184: At leaſt five Hundred of theſe reforming Vultures are daily plundering our Pockets, and ranſacking our Houſes, leaving me ſometimes not one pair of Tractable Buttocks in my Vaulting-School to provide for my Family, or earn me ſo much as a Pudding for my next Sundays Dinner : [...] 0 0 2012/01/25 07:19 2012/01/25 07:20
12383 bra [[English]] ipa :/brɑː/[Anagrams] - ABR - ARB - bar, Bar [Etymology 1] Shortened from brassiere [Etymology 2] From bracket [Etymology 3] Representing a different pronunciation of bro, meaning brother [[Lojban]] [Rafsi] bra 1.Rafsi of barda. [[Swedish]] ipa :/brɑː/[Adjective] bra (comparative bättre, superlative bäst) 1.good [Adverb] bra (comparative bättre, superlative bäst) 1.well [Etymology] Since at least 1621, from braf (“good, brave”); from German brav; from French brave. [See also] - väl - god 0 0 2009/02/06 11:18 2012/01/25 07:38 TaN
12385 pastel [[English]] ipa :/ˈpæstəl/[Anagrams] - palest, petals, plates, pleats, septal, staple, tepals [Etymology] From Latin pasta (“paste”). [Noun] pastel (plural pastels) 1.Any of several subdued tints of colors, usually associated with pink, peach, yellow, green, blue and lavender 2.A drawing made with any of those colors. 3.A type of dried paste used to make crayons. 4.A crayon made from such a paste. [[Danish]] ipa :/pastɛl/[Etymology] From French pastel, Italian pastello (“pastel”), from Medieval Latin pastellum (“dough, paste”), from Latin pasta (“dough, paste”). [Noun] pastel c. (singular definite pastellen, plural indefinite pasteller) 1.pastel [[Portuguese]] [Noun] pastel m. (plural pastéis) 1.crayon 2.a fried pastry made of wheat flour, filled with cheese, meat or other fillings; comparable to German Teigtaschen [[Spanish]] [Etymology] From Latin pastellus. [Noun] pastel m. (plural pasteles) 1.cake, pie, pastry 0 0 2012/01/25 07:38 2012/01/25 07:38
12386 testicle [[English]] ipa :/ˈtɛstɪkəl/[Anagrams] - telestic [Etymology] Latin testiculum, testicle, diminutive of testis, witness + diminutive suffix -ulum [Noun] Human testiclestesticle (plural testicles) 1.The male sex and endocrine gland that produces sperm and male sex hormones, including the steroid testosterone, found in some types of animals. 2.2000, Margaret Atwood, The Blind Assassin, page 372: Despite your jogging and the hairiness of your legs, the shoe of aging is beginning to pinch. Soon you'll regret all that sun-tanning. Your face will look like a testicle. [Synonyms] - testis (medical) - ball (perhaps vulgar) - bollock (perhaps alteration of "ballock") - lamb fries(In culinary) - see also WikiSaurus:testicles [[Catalan]] [Etymology] From Latin testicle, diminutive of testis. [Noun] testicle m. (plural testicles) 1.testicle 0 0 2012/01/24 18:18 2012/01/25 07:44
12390 qwerty [[English]] ipa :/ˈkwɜː(r)ti/[Adjective] qwerty (not comparable) 1.Denoting a standard layout of keys on a keyboard for typing, in which the leftmost keys of the top row are Q-W-E-R-T-Y. 2.1978, Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science, v 24 (Printers and Printing/Arabic Printing to Public Policy/Copyright, and Information Technology), p 109: It was the Monotype model D keyboard introduced in 1907 which became the standard for printers, with a “qwerty” typewriter lay and removable keybars which made the keyboard independent of the matrix case arrangement. [Etymology] From the first six letters on the top row of such a keyboard. [See also] - azerty - qwertz - asdf [[French]] [Noun] qwerty m. sg. 1.a qwerty keyboard 0 0 2012/01/25 09:27 2012/01/25 09:27
12396 alkali [[English]] ipa :/ˈæl.kəl.aɪ/[Antonyms] - (chemistry): acid [Etymology] French alcali, ultimately from Arabic القلي (al-qilī, “ashes of the saltwort”), from قلى (qalā, “to roast in a pan, fry”). [Noun] alkali (plural alkalies or alkalis) 1.(chemistry) One of a class of caustic bases, such as soda, potash, ammonia, and lithia, whose distinguishing peculiarities are solubility in alcohol and water, uniting with oils and fats to form soap, neutralizing and forming salts with acids, turning to brown several vegetable yellows, and changing reddened litmus to blue. 2.Soda ash; caustic soda, caustic potash, etc. 3.(Western United States) Soluble mineral matter, other than common salt, contained in soils of natural waters. [See also] - caustic - pH [Synonyms] - (chemistry): base [[Finnish]] ipa :-ɑli[Noun] alkali 1.alkali 0 0 2012/01/25 13:42 2012/01/25 13:42
12398 alkalinity [[English]] [Antonyms] - acidity [Noun] Wikipedia has an article on:AlkalinityWikipedia alkalinity (plural alkalinities) 1.(chemistry) The state of being, or the degree to which a thing is, alkaline. 0 0 2012/01/25 13:44 2012/01/25 13:44
12400 simple [[English]] ipa :/ˈsɪmpl/[Adjective] simple (comparative simpler, superlative simplest) 1.Uncomplicated; taken by itself, with nothing added. 2.2001, Sydney I. Landau, Dictionaries: The Art and Craft of Lexicography, Cambridge University Press (ISBN 0-521-78512-X), page 167, There is no simple way to define precisely a complex arrangement of parts, however homely the object may appear to be. 3.Without ornamentation; plain. 4.Free from duplicity; guileless, innocent, straightforward. 5.Undistinguished in social condition; of no special rank. 6.(now rare) Trivial; insignificant. 7.1485, Thomas Malory, Le Morte Darthur, Book X: ‘That was a symple cause,’ seyde Sir Trystram, ‘for to sle a good knyght for seyynge well by his maystir.’ 8.(now colloquial) Feeble-minded; foolish. 9.(chemistry) Consisting of one single substance; uncompounded. 10.(mathematics) Of a group: having no normal subgroup. 11.(botany) Not compound, but possibly lobed. [Anagrams] - impels [Antonyms] - (having few parts or features): complex, compound, complicated [Etymology] From Middle English simple, from Old French and French simple, from Latin simplex (“simple, literally 'onefold', as opposed to duplex, twofold, double”), from sim- (“the same”) + plicare (“to fold”): see same and fold. Compare single, singular, simultaneous, etc. [Noun] simple (plural simples) 1.(medicine) A preparation made from one plant, as opposed to something made from more than one plant. 2.(logic) A simple or atomic proposition [Statistics] - Most common English words before 1923: smile · walk · places · #709: simple · fresh · noble · appearance [Synonyms] - (consisting of a single part or aspect): onefold - (having few parts or features): plain - See WikiSaurus:easy [Verb] simple (third-person singular simple present simples, present participle simpling, simple past and past participle simpled) 1.(transitive, intransitive, archaic) To gather simples, ie, medicinal herbs. [[Anglo-Norman]] [Adjective] simple m. and f. (plural simples) 1.innocent 2.mere; simple 3.honest; without pretense 4.peasant, pauper (attibutive) [Alternative forms] - sinple [Etymology] Latin simplex [[Catalan]] ipa :[ˈsimpɫə][Adjective] simple m. and f. (plural simples) 1.simple (uncomplicated) 2.single (not divided into parts) [Etymology] From Latin simplex. [Synonyms] - senzill [[Esperanto]] ipa :/ˈsimple/[Adverb] simple 1.simply [Etymology] simpl- + -e [[French]] ipa :/sɛ̃pl/[Adjective] simple (epicene, plural simples) 1.simple 2.one-way Un billet simple. A one-way ticket. [Anagrams] - emplis [Noun] simple m. (plural simples) 1.one-way ticket 2.(baseball) single [[Galician]] [Adjective] simple m. and f. (plural simples) 1.simple [[Latin]] [Adjective] simple 1.vocative masculine singular of simplus [[Old French]] [Adjective] simple m. and f. (plural simples) 1.innocent 2.mere; simple 3.honest; without pretense 4.peasant, pauper (attibutive) [Alternative forms] - sinple [Etymology] Latin simplex [[Romanian]] ipa :[ˈsim.ple][Adjective] simple 1.feminine plural nominative form of simplu 2.feminine plural accusative form of simplu 3.neuter plural nominative form of simplu 4.neuter plural accusative form of simplu [[Spanish]] [Adjective] simple m. and f. (plural simples) 1.simple 2.mere, uncomplicated, easy 3.single 4.insipid [Noun] simple m. and f. (plural simples) 1.simpleton, fool 2.(pharmacology, masculine) simple [[Swedish]] [Adjective] simple 1.absolute definite natural masculine form of simpel. 0 0 2008/12/14 01:28 2012/01/25 13:45 TaN
12405 submerge [[English]] ipa :-ɜː(r)dʒ[Etymology] From Latin submergere, from sub- ("under") + mergere ("to plunge"). [Synonyms] - immerse (2) - submerse [Verb] submerge (third-person singular simple present submerges, present participle submerging, simple past and past participle submerged) 1.(intransitive) To sink out of sight. The submarine submerged in the water. 2.(transitive) To put into a liquid; to immerse; to plunge into and keep in. In films many people are murdered by being submerged in a swimming pool. 3.(transitive) To be engulfed in or with something. Because of the death of his father, he is submerged in sorrow. [[French]] ipa :/syb.mɛʁʒ/[Verb] submerge 1.first-person singular present indicative of submerger 2.third-person singular present indicative of submerger 3.first-person singular present subjunctive of submerger 4.first-person singular present subjunctive of submerger 5.second-person singular imperative of submerger [[Latin]] [Verb] submerge 1.second-person singular present active imperative of submergō 0 0 2012/01/25 13:47 2012/01/25 13:48
12406 submerged [[English]] [Adjective] submerged (comparative more submerged, superlative most submerged) 1.Something that is underwater. Jimmy was completely submerged when he was snorkeling. [Verb] submerged 1.Simple past tense and past participle of submerge. 0 0 2010/01/12 18:25 2012/01/25 13:48 TaN
51186 crack [[English]] ipa :/kɹæk/[Etymology 1] From Middle English crakken, craken, from Old English cracian (“to resound, crack”), from Proto-West Germanic *krakōn, from Proto-Germanic *krakōną (“to crack, crackle, shriek”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *gerh₂- (“to resound, cry hoarsely”).Cognate with Scots crak (“to crack”), West Frisian kreakje (“to crack”), Dutch kraken (“to crunch, creak, squeak”), Low German kraken (“to crack”), German krachen (“to crash, crack, creak”), Lithuanian gìrgžděti (“to creak, squeak”), Old Armenian կարկաչ (karkačʿ), Sanskrit गर्जति (gárjati, “to roar, hum”). [Etymology 2] Of unknown origin. [Further reading] - “crack”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022. - “crack”, in The Century Dictionary […], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911, →OCLC. - “crack”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC. [[Finnish]] ipa :/ˈkræk/[Etymology] From English crack. [Further reading] - “crack”, in Kielitoimiston sanakirja [Dictionary of Contemporary Finnish]‎[4] (online dictionary, continuously updated, in Finnish), Helsinki: Kotimaisten kielten tutkimuskeskus (Institute for the Languages of Finland), 2004–, retrieved 2023-07-02 [Noun] crack 1.crack (variety of cocaine) [[French]] ipa :/kʁak/[Etymology] Borrowed from English crack. [Further reading] - “crack”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012. [Noun] crack m (plural cracks) 1.(colloquial) champion, ace, expert Synonyms: champion, as C’est un crack en informatique. ― He/she is a computer whiz. 2.(computing) crack (program or procedure designed to circumvent restrictions)crack f (uncountable) 1.crack cocaine [[Portuguese]] ipa :/ˈkɾak/[Etymology] Unadapted borrowing from English crack. [Further reading] - “crack” in Dicionário Priberam da Língua Portuguesa. [Noun] crack m (plural cracks) 1.Alternative form of craque [[Spanish]] ipa :/ˈkɾak/[Etymology 1] Unadapted borrowing from English crack. [Etymology 2] Borrowed from French krach, from German Krach. [Further reading] - “crack”, in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014 [[Swedish]] [Etymology] Borrowed from English crack. [Noun] crack n or c 1.(uncountable, colloquial) crack cocaine 0 0 2012/01/25 13:51 2023/12/13 10:45
12411 cratch [[English]] [Etymology 1] From Middle English cratchen, cracchen (“to scratch”), alteration of *cratsen (“to scratch”), from North Germanic *kratsa or Middle Low German kratsen, krassen (“to scratch”), both ultimately from Old High German krazzōn, crazōn (“to scratch”), from Proto-Germanic *krattōnan (“to scratch”), from Proto-Indo-European *gred-, *grod- (“to scratch, scrape”). Cognate with Icelandic krota (“to engrave”). Compare also Icelandic krassa (“to scrawl”), Danish kradse (“to scratch, scrape, claw”), Swedish kratsa (“to scratch”), Dutch kratsen (“to scratch”), German kratzen (“to scratch”). [Etymology 2] From Middle English cratche, cracche, crecche (“crib”), from Old French creche (“crib, manger”), of Germanic origin, from Frankish *krippja (“crib”), akin to Old High German crippa, cripha (“crib”). More at creche, crib. 0 0 2012/01/25 13:52
12413 baseball [[English]] [Etymology] base + ball [Noun] baseball (plural baseballs) 1.A sport common in North America, the Caribbean, and Japan, in which the object is to strike a ball so that one of a nine-person team can run counter-clockwise among four bases, resulting in the scoring of a run. The team with the most runs after termination of play, usually nine innings, wins. 2.1797-1798, Jane Austen, Northanger Abbey It was not very wonderful that Catherine, who had nothing heroic about her, should prefer cricket, base-ball, riding on horseback, and running about the country at the age of fourteen, to books. 3.The ball used to play the sport of baseball. 4.A variant of poker in which cards with baseball-related values have special significance. [See also] - rounders - softball - wiffleball - Appendix:Glossary of baseball [[Czech]] [Noun] baseball m. 1.baseball (game) [[Finnish]] [Noun] baseball 1.baseball [Synonyms] - amerikkalainen pesäpallo (archaic) [[French]] [Etymology] English [Noun] baseball m. (usually uncountable) 1.baseball [[Hungarian]] ipa :/ˈbeːsboːl/[Noun] baseball 1.baseball [[Italian]] [Etymology] English [Noun] baseball m. inv. 1.(sports) baseball [Synonyms] - pallabase (rare) [[Polish]] ipa :/ˈbɛjz̪bɔl/[Alternative forms] - bejsbol [Noun] baseball m. 1.baseball 0 0 2012/01/25 13:52 2012/01/25 13:53
12414 vouer [[French]] ipa :/vwe/[Anagrams] - ouvre, ouvré [Verb] vouer 1.to vow 2.(transitive) to devote (+ à to) 3.(reflexive) to devote oneself, to be devoted 0 0 2012/01/25 13:55
12415 vo [[Italian]] [Synonyms] - vado [Verb] vo 1.first-person singular present tense of andare [[Japanese]] [Syllable] vo 1.The hiragana syllable ゔぉ (vo) or the katakana syllable ヴォ (vo) in Hepburn romanization. [[Lojban]] [Cmavo] vo (rafsi von) 1.four [[Serbo-Croatian]] [Etymology] Common Slavic *vol. [Noun] vo m. (Cyrillic spelling во) 1.ox [Synonyms] - bik 0 0 2012/01/25 13:55
12416 vower [[English]] [Etymology] vow +‎ -er [Noun] vower (plural vowers) 1.One who makes a vow. Bale.Part or all of this entry has been imported from the 1913 edition of Webster’s Dictionary, which is now free of copyright and hence in the public domain. The imported definitions may be significantly out of date, and any more recent senses may be completely missing. 0 0 2012/01/25 13:55
12418 vowel [[English]] ipa :/ˈvaʊəl/[Anagrams] - wolve [Antonyms] - (sound): consonant - (letter): consonant [Etymology] From Old French vouel (French: voyelle), from Latin vocalis, "voiced". [Noun] vowel (plural vowels) 1.(phonetics) A sound produced by the vocal cords with relatively little restriction of the oral cavity, forming the prominent sound of a syllable. 2.A letter representing the sound of vowel; in English, the vowels are a, e, i, o and u, and sometimes y. 0 0 2009/02/02 19:30 2012/01/25 13:55 TaN
12419 shogun [[English]] ipa :/ˈʃəʊɡʌn/[Etymology] From Japanese 将軍 (shōgun), from an abbreviation of 征夷大将軍 (Seii Taishogun) which means the general who overcomes the barbarians. [Noun] shogun (plural shoguns) 1.The supreme generalissimo of feudal Japan. 2.The third is the Shogun who reygneth at the preſent , and hath rayſed the perſecution ( whereof this booke intreateth ) againſt the Chriſtians , and he as it ſeemeth is acknowledged as Lord of all the threeſcore and ſix Kingdomes of Iaponia . 1619: W. W. Gent (tr.), A briefe relation of the persecution lately made against the Catholike christians, in the Kingdome of Iaponia, devided into two books [See also] - Wikipedia article on "shogun" [[French]] ipa :/ʃɔɡun/[Noun] shogun m. 1.shogun This French entry was created from the translations listed at shogun. It may be less reliable than other entries, and may be missing parts of speech or additional senses. Please also see shogun in the French Wiktionary. This notice will be removed when the entry is checked. (more information) July 2009 [[Polish]] ipa :/ˈɕɔɡun̪/[Alternative forms] - siogun, szogun [Etymology] From Japanese 将軍 (shōgun) [Noun] shogun m. 1.shogun 0 0 2012/01/24 13:22 2012/01/25 13:56
12421 shogunate [[English]] [Etymology] Japanese 将軍 (“shogun”) + -ate. [Noun] shogunate (plural shogunates) 1.The administration of a Shogun [Synonyms] - bakufu 0 0 2009/10/11 18:55 2012/01/25 13:56 TaN
12422 tenno [[English]] [Alternative forms] - Tenno, Tennou [Anagrams] - nonet, tenon, tonne [Etymology] Romanization of Japanese 天皇 (てんのう, Ten’nou) [Noun] tenno (plural tennos) 1.Japan’s titular head of state and the head of the Japanese imperial family. The emperor of Japan. [References] - Webster’s Third New International Dictionary lists only the spelling tenno, noting that it is often capitalized. - Microsoft Encarta Online has no entry. [[Japanese]] [Proper noun] tenno (hiragana てんのう) 1.天皇: The Emperor of Japan. Mainly used in Japan. Ten'no Akihito [See also] - mikado 0 0 2012/01/24 14:46 2012/01/25 13:57
12424 mikado [[English]] [Etymology] Japanese from (mi) "honorable" + (kado) "gate, portal" [Noun] mikado (plural mikados) 1.(history) A former title of the emperors of Japan during a certain period. 2.(literary) Any emperor of Japan. The mikados of Japan are its emperors. 3.A game of skill, in which identical wooden sticks must be removed from a pile without disturbing the remaining sticks [Synonyms] - (emperor of Japan): tenno [[Dutch]] [Etymology] From Japanese from (mi) "honorable" + (kado) "gate, portal" [Noun] mikado m. (plural mikado's, diminutive mikadootje) 1.(history) mikado, a former title of the emperors of Japan during a certain period 2.(literary) any emperor of Japan 3.mikado (game of skill) [[Esperanto]] [Etymology] From Japanese みかど (mikado). [Noun] mikado (plural mikadoj, accusative singular mikadon, accusative plural mikadojn) 1.mikado [[French]] [Etymology] From Japanese from (mi) "honorable" + (kado) "gate, portal" [Noun] mikado m. (plural mikados) 1.(history) mikado, a former title of the emperors of Japan during a certain period 2.(literary) any emperor of Japan 3.mikado (game of skill) 0 0 2012/01/25 13:58 2012/01/25 13:59
12428 valva [[English]] [Noun] valva (plural valvae) 1.A paired copulatory organ of males in some species of insects that helps the male clasp the female. [[Italian]] [Noun] valva f. (plural valve) 1.(anatomy, zoology) valve, half shell [[Latin]] [Noun] valva (genitive valvae); f, first declension 1.double or folding door (in plural) 2.one leaf of such doors 0 0 2012/01/25 14:00 2012/01/25 14:00
12432 burma [[Serbo-Croatian]] ipa :/bûːrma/[Etymology] From Ottoman Turkish بورمه (burma), from بورمق (burmak, “to twist”). [Noun] bȗrma f. (Cyrillic spelling бу̑рма) 1.wedding ring 2.(obsolete) screw (fastener) [Synonyms] - (wedding ring): vȇra, vènčanī pȑstēn / vjènčanī pȑstēn - (screw): šàrāf, šrȁf, víjak, zȁvr̄tanj 0 0 2012/01/25 14:01 2012/01/25 14:02
12434 twit [[English]] ipa :/twɪt/[Etymology] Originally “‘twite’”, an aphetism of Middle English atwite. [Noun] twit (plural twits) 1.A reproach, gibe or taunt. 2.A foolish or annoying person. (In the UK and UK English-speaking areas, usually used in a humorous or affectionate manner.) 3.What do you mean, since when did I become such a radical fairy? Since I started knowing twits like you, you twit! - Larry Kramer, Just Say No [Verb] to twit (third-person singular simple present twits, present participle twitting, simple past and past participle twitted) 1.(transitive) To reproach, blame; to ridicule or tease. 2.2007: H. R. Fox Bourne, secretary of the Aborigines' Protection Society – often twitted for being an ‘armchair critic’ – wrote in a review of one of Stanley's books — Bernard Porter, ‘Did He Puff his Crimes to Please a Bloodthirsty Readership?’, London Review of Books 29:7, p. 10 0 0 2009/10/17 03:40 2012/01/25 14:02 TaN
12439 zippo [[English]] [Adjective] zippo (not comparable) 1.(slang) None whatsoever 2.2007 January 14, G. Pascal Zachary, “Out of Africa: Cotton and Cash”: “The whole situation is magnificent news, especially when the problem has been zippo investment by large corporations in Africa,” says Robert H. Bates […] . [Etymology] zip +‎ -o [[Italian]] [Anagrams] - zoppi [Verb] zippo 1.first-person singular present indicative of zippare 0 0 2012/01/25 14:11 2012/01/25 14:12
12441 nah [[English]] ipa :/næ/[Anagrams] - ahn, Han [Interjection] nah 1.(informal) no. [[German]] ipa :/naː/[Adjective] nah 1.near (in space or time or in an abstract sense) [Adverb] nah 1.near (in space or time or in an abstract sense) [Antonyms] - fern - weit - fern [Etymology] From Old High German nāh. [Synonyms] - nahe [[Indonesian]] ipa :/nah/[Conjunction] nah 1.Used in a narrative or an argument. It appears at the beginning of a sentence and suggests that the previous part of the narrative or argument is complete and clear and that you are now about to move on to to the next part or next step. The following are the closest equivalents in English. "Now" or "Okay, now..." Nah, itu yang tidak bisa kita ketahui Now, that's what we haven't been able to find out. Lalu saya dipecat dengan tidak hormat. Nah, ini yang minimbulkan perasaan bahwa itu keterlaluan. Then I was given a dishonourable dismissal. Now, this is what made me feel that they had over-stepped the mark. [Interjection] nah 1.I told you so! See?! (at long last the penny's dropped). Nah! Makanya jangan makan buah banyak-banyak (a mother scolding a child who has a stomachache) See?! That's why you shouldn't eat a lot of fruit. [[Old High German]] [Etymology 1] From Proto-Germanic *nēhw. Cognates include Old English nēh, nēah and Old Norse ná. [Etymology 2] From Proto-Germanic *nēhwiz. 0 0 2012/01/25 14:12 2012/01/25 14:12
12445 logos [[English]] [Anagrams] - slogo [Etymology 1] From Ancient Greek λόγος (lógos, “speech, oration, discourse, quote, story, study, ratio, word, calculation, reason”). [Etymology 2] [[Cornish]] [Noun] logos f. (singulative logosen or logojen) 1.mice [[Esperanto]] [Verb] logos 1.future of logi [[French]] [Noun] logos m. 1.Plural form of logo. [[Italian]] [Anagrams] - sgolo, sgolò - slogo, slogò [Noun] logos m. inv. 1.logos [[Latvian]] [Noun] logos 1.plural locative form of logs [[Serbo-Croatian]] ipa :/lôːɡos/[Etymology] From Ancient Greek λόγος (lógos). [Noun] lȏgos m. (Cyrillic spelling ло̑гос) 1.(philosophy, religion) logos [[Swedish]] [Noun] logos 1.indefinite possessive singular of logo 0 0 2012/01/25 16:54 2012/01/25 16:55
12448 hornet [[English]] ipa :/ˈhɔː.nɪt/[Anagrams] - nother, Thorne, throne [Etymology] Middle English hernet, from Old English hyrnetu, hyrnete, from Proto-Germanic *khurznut- (compare German Hornisse), alteration of *khurzulon (compare Dutch horzel), from Proto-Indo-European *k̑érh2sr (compare Welsh creyryn 'wasp', Latin crābrō 'hornet', Tocharian kronše 'bee', Lithuanian šìršė 'wasp', Old Church Slavonic сръшень (srŭšenĭ) 'hornet', Albanian grerë, grenzë 'wasp, hornet'). [Noun] hornet (plural hornets) 1.A large wasp, of the genus Vespa, with a brown and yellow striped body and capable of inflicting a serious sting. [[Swedish]] [Noun] hornet 1.definite singular of horn 0 0 2012/01/25 16:57 2012/01/25 16:57
12450 hornets [[English]] [Anagrams] - shorten - thrones [Noun] hornets 1.Plural form of hornet. [[Swedish]] [Noun] hornets 1.definite possessive singular of horn 0 0 2012/01/25 16:57 2012/01/25 16:57
12454 areola [[English]] [Etymology] From Latin āreola (“small vacant space, garden”) [Noun] areola (plural areolas or areolae or areolæ) 1.(anatomy) The colored circle around a nipple, more exactly known as areola mammae. 2.(anatomy) Any small circular area that is different from its immediate environment such as the colored ring around the pupil of the eye (iris) or an inflamed region surrounding a pimple. [[Italian]] [Noun] areola f. (plural areole) 1.areola [[Latin]] [Noun] āreola (genitive āreolae); f, first declension 1.a small open place; courtyard 2.a small garden bed or cultivated place [References] - areola in Charlton T. Lewis & Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1879 0 0 2012/01/26 09:52 2012/01/26 09:52
12456 groin [[English]] ipa :-ɔɪn[Anagrams] - O-ring, Ringo [Noun] groin (plural groins) 1.The long narrow depression of the human body that separates the trunk from the legs. 2.2011 October 15, Phil McNulty, “Liverpool 1 - 1 Man Utd”, BBC Sport: The Mexican levelled nine minutes from time after Steven Gerrard, making his first start since undergoing groin surgery in April, put Liverpool ahead with a 68th-minute free-kick. 3.(architecture) The projecting solid angle formed by the meeting of two vaults 4.(geometry) The surface formed by two such vaults. 5.A structure projecting from a beach to change the pattern of erosion. [Verb] groin (third-person singular simple present groins, present participle groining, simple past and past participle groined) 1.(architecture) To build with groins. [[French]] ipa :/ɡʁwɛ̃/[Anagrams] - giron [Noun] groin m. (plural groins) 1.the snout of the pig 0 0 2012/01/26 09:52 2012/01/26 09:53
12458 pudenda [[English]] ipa :/pjʊˈdɛndə/[Etymology] Plural form of pudendum, both in English and in Latin (quod vide). [Noun] pudenda pl. 1.Plural form of pudendum. 1.(usually in the plural) A person’s external genitalia. 2.1638 Herbert, Sir Thomas Some years travels into divers parts of Asia and Afrique The reſt of their bodies are naked, ſave that a thong or girdle of raw leather circles them, a ſquare peece (like the back of a Glove) is faſtened to it, serving to cover their pudenda. 3.(figuratively) The shameful parts of something. [[Latin]] [Participle] pudenda 1.nominative feminine singular of pudendus 2.nominative neuter plural of pudendus 3.accusative neuter plural of pudendus 4.vocative feminine singular of pudendus 5.vocative neuter plural of pudenduspudendā 1.ablative feminine singular of pudendus 0 0 2012/01/26 09:53 2012/01/26 09:53
12462 armpit [[English]] [Anagrams] - impart - Primat [Etymology] From arm +‎ pit [Noun] armpit (plural armpits) 1.The cavity beneath the junction of the arm and shoulder. 2.Somewhere or something considered foul. The armpit of America. [Synonyms] - axilla - oxter - under-arm, underarm 0 0 2012/01/26 09:54 2012/01/26 09:54
12468 adam [[Norwegian]] [Etymology] From the story of Adam and Eve in the Bible. [Noun] adam - Is not declined in Bokmål - In Nynorsk: adam m. (definite singular adamen; indefinite plural adamar; definite plural adamane) 1.Certain properties of a person, often derived from the biblical story Den gamle adam = the sinful human nature (literally: "the old adam") Adams drakt or adamsdrakt = to be naked (literally: "Adam's costume") 2.Used in sayings and proverbs Hvor lenge var Adam i paradis? = happiness is often short-lived (literally: "how long was Adam in Paradise?") [[Turkish]] ipa :/ɑ.dɑm/[Antonyms] - kadın [Etymology] From Arabic. [Noun] adam (definite accusative adamı, plural adamlar) 1.man 0 0 2012/01/26 09:58
12470 vulva [[English]] ipa :/ˈvʌlvə/[Etymology] From Latin vulva, earlier volva (“womb, female sexual organ”), probably from volvare (“to turn, wrap around”). Akin to Sanskrit  (ulva, “womb”). [Noun] vulva (plural vulvas or vulvae or vulvæ) 1.(anatomy) The external female sexual organs, collectively. [Synonyms] - See also Wikisaurus:vulva [[Galician]] [Etymology] From Latin vulva. [Noun] vulva f. (plural vulvas) 1.vulva [[Italian]] [Etymology] From Latin vulva. [Noun] vulva f. (plural vulve) 1.(anatomy) vulva [[Latin]] ipa :/ˈwul.wa/[Pronunciation 1] - (Classical) IPA: /ˈwul.wa/ [Pronunciation 2] - (Classical) IPA: /ˈwul.waː/ 0 0 2012/01/26 09:59 2012/01/26 09:59
12472 quim [[English]] ipa :/kwɪm/[Etymology 1] Origin uncertain; perhaps an alteration of queem. Compare also quaint, cunt. Derivation from Welsh cwm (“valley”) is sometimes suggested, but the OED notes that this is "unlikely on both semantic and phonological grounds". [Etymology 2] From Scots queem. 0 0 2012/01/26 10:00 2012/01/26 10:00
12479 hotbox [[English]] [Etymology] hot +‎ box [Noun] hotbox (plural hotboxes) 1.A container maintained at elevated temperatures in order to heat or cook its contents. 2.(engineering) An overheated shaft bearing. [Synonyms] - (smoke in a confined area): clam bake, box out [Verb] hotbox (third-person singular simple present hotboxes, present participle hotboxing, simple past and past participle hotboxed) 1.To smoke marijuana in a small confined area, such as the inside of a car, until it is full of smoke, thereby purportedly intensifying the drug's effects. 2.To put out a cigarette just before entering a vehicle, then expel smoke in the vehicle. 0 0 2012/01/26 10:02 2012/01/26 10:02

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