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Answer for the clue "Torpedo, in British slang ", 6 letters:
mouldy

Alternative clues for the word mouldy

Word definitions for mouldy in dictionaries

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
adjective COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES mouldy British English , moldy American English (= covered with a green substance that grows on old food ) ▪ All there was in the house was a loaf of mouldy old bread. EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES ▪ All there was ...

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. 1 Covered with mould. 2 neglected. alt. 1 Covered with mould. 2 neglected.

WordNet Word definitions in WordNet
adj. covered with or smelling of mold; "moldy bread"; "a moldy (or musty) odor" [syn: moldy , musty ] [also: mouldiest , mouldier ]

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
see moldy .

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Moldy \Mold"y\, Mouldy \Mould"y\, a. [Compar. Moldier or Mouldier ; superl. Moldiest or Mouldiest .] [From Mold the growth of fungi.] Overgrown with, or containing, mold; smelling of mold; as, moldy cheese or bread.

Usage examples of mouldy.

I wondered what he thought about and what passed through his mind in the sunny leisure which seemed to shut him in from that modern work-a-day world of which, in spite of my passion for bedaubing old panels with ineffective portraiture of mouldy statues against screens of box, I still flattered myself I was a member.

Some of the streets that are denied the gasometer cluster narrow and dark, hardly built twenty years perhaps, yet long since drearily old,--with the unattractive antiquity of old iron and old clothes,--round a mouldy little chapel, in what we can only describe as the Wesleyan Methodist style of architecture.

Geneva he believed might last for months and he detested the place, which, as Lord Lamancha had once said, was full of the ghosts of mouldy old jurisconsults, and the living presence of cosmopolitan bores.

Malthouse, the tapster, was arguing to Dame Martin that a murder now and then was a seasonable check to population, without which the Isle of Sheppey would in time be devoured, like a mouldy cheese, by inhabitants of its own producing.

A practice which has ever struck their senses, and of which they have seen and heard innumerable precedents, has an authority with them much superior to that which attends maxims derived from antiquated statutes and mouldy records.

He and Garin sat together to share a meagre breakfast of stale flatbread and mouldy cheese.

Leaving the door ajar, amid the stench of mouldy limewash and stale cobwebs he undid his braces.

Midway in this space a black well opened, and Carter soon saw that he had indeed reached the yawning gulf whose crusted and mouldy stone steps lead down to the crypts of nightmare.

And this reminds me that certain Englishmen, who long ago were accidentally left in Greenland by a whaling vessel-- that these men actually lived for several months on the mouldy scraps of whales which had been left ashore after trying out the blubber.

There was mouldy hay in the mangers and dried manure stilll in the cowshed gutters.

Eric had disappeared, his character superseded by a more waspish persona, an alter-ego that regarded the punters through cynical spangled eyes for a moment before slipping between the mouldy red velvet curtains and acknowledging the entrance music to the roar of an appreciative crowd.

And seated in the one chair of the room, Magnus Derrick remained a long time, looking at his face in the cracked mirror that for so many years had reflected the painted faces of soubrettes, in this atmosphere of stale perfume and mouldy rice powder.

In the fridge he had also found blackening avocadoes, tomatoes spotted with grey, whiskery sweetcorn and mouldy cheese.

But the atmosphere was the same, a hundred years or more of battlers' hopes that had gone mouldy, never able to escape through the front door to realization.

To me they were only a mouldy collection of bones and fossils and shells, of stone pestles and mortars, of charred timber and clay utensils and curiously shaped stones.