Wiktionary
n. tolerance of other people's views, particularly in religious context.
n. pharmacognosis
n. (plural of hypercorrection English)
adv. In a succinct manner, concisely.
n. (plural of vaejovid English)
n. (alternative form of paper cut English)
n. (context biology English) The process leading to the formation of synapses
n. The presentation of numerical data on any of many types of display
a. Without a pulpit.
n. (context mathematics English) A function of a discrete random variable yielding the probability that the variable will have a given value
n. (plural of nimiety English)
a. Pertaining to septorhinoplasty.
n. 1 (context uncountable English) A type of sauce made from milk and eggs (and usually sugar, and sometimes vanilla or other flavourings) and thickened by heat, served hot poured over desserts, as a filling for some pies and cakes, or cold and solidified; also used as a base for some savoury dishes, such as quiches. 2 (context countable English) Any particular variety of custard.
n. (alternative form of pincushion English)
n. theophylline
n. (plural of webtoon English)
a. Insufficiently scrupulous.
Etymology 1 n. 1 (cx dialect colloquial English) A blow; a whack. 2 (cx Britain Scotland dialect colloquial English) A large piece or slice; a chunk. 3 (cx US dialect dated English) A house-cleaning party. vb. 1 (context chiefly of an object English) To make a noise such as something moving quickly through the air. 2 (context informal transitive English) To throw with a rapid slamming motion. 3 (context US Scotland Britain dialect slang English) To whack or beat. 4 (cx Scotland English) To slice, especially into large pieces; to chop. Etymology 2
alt. 1 (context UK US dialect informal dated English) A leather thong. 2 (context slang English) A penis. n. 1 (context UK US dialect informal dated English) A leather thong. 2 (context slang English) A penis.
vb. (context archaic English) (en-archaic second-person singular of: wallow)
n. (context astronomy English) A phenomenon occurring when many meteors are seen on Earth during a short period of time.
Etymology 1 n. 1 (context chiefly British informal English) information 2 (context fandom English) fanfiction that does not specifically focus on romance or sex. Etymology 2
n. (alternative case form of Gen English)
vb. (en-third-person singular of: emblematize)
n. (plural of absolute pin English)
n. (plural of rheostat English)
vb. (context transitive English) To keep at a distance
n. 1 a pin, in the form of a clasp, that has a guard to cover the sharp point; used to join two pieces of fabric etc together temporarily 2 the pin of a hand grenade that prevents accidental detonation
n. 1 An open-topped box that can be slid in and out of the cabinet that contains it, used for storing clothing or other articles. 2 (non-gloss definition agent noun Agent noun of draw); one who draws. 3 An artist who primarily makes drawings. 4 (context banking English) One who writes a bank draft, check/cheque, or promissory note. 5 A barman; a man who draws the beer from the taps. 6 Someone who taps palm sap for making toddy.(w Palm wine W)
n. A plant in the taxonomic genus ''Equisetum'' (horsetails); (taxlink Equisetum variegatum species noshow=1).
vb. (en-past of: letheonize)
alt. metallic armour made of large pieces or plates. n. metallic armour made of large pieces or plates.
adv. (context obsolete English) smugly; finically
(context of pain English) sharp, intense n. An incident in which a person is stabbed. v
(present participle of stab English)
n. (context neuroanatomy English) In vertebrates, that part of the nervous system comprising the brain, brainstem and spinal cord.
n. The amygdaloid
vb. (en-third-person singular of: theologize)
n. A personality disorder indicated by a pattern of lying, exploitation, heedlessness, arrogance, sexual promiscuity, low self-control, and lack of empathy and remorse. Violent and criminal offenses may be indicative of this disorder.
n. (context musici English) A woodwind musical instrument that has a distinctive liquid tone whose characteristics vary among its three registers: chalumeau (low), clarion (medium), and altissimo (high).
n. (context obsolete English) (plural of bastle English)
Usage examples of "bastles".
The baying was very faint now, and it ceased altogether as I approached the ancient grave I had once violated, and frightened away an abnormally large horde of bats which had been hovering curiously around it.
Something fluttered, flittered, dipped, and bobbed in the clear desert sky like an addled bat driven into sunshine.
Vaughn loaded the UHF satellite message buoy, roughly the size of a baseball bat, into the aft signal ejector, a small mechanism much like a torpedo tube set into the upper level of the aft compartment.
He had to guess, of course, which way agile Tallareyish would spin, and even though he guessed correctly that the elf would go to his right, his swipe was batted aside, not once but three times, before it ever got close to hitting the mark.
She chewed her lower lip as a million places sprang to mind, bat driving aimlessly around was pointless.
After all, in a world where some men could turn into bats and preferred the taste of blood to andouille gumbo, what was one more mystery?
Aquele carro podia, em lugar de bater no barranco, ter batido no nosso.
He was a remarkable fielder and a good batsman for a pitcher, men who play that position being poor wielders of the ash, as a rule, for the reason, as I have always thought, that they paid more attention to the art of deceiving the batsman that are opposed to them than they do to developing their own batting powers.
Though its paint was cracked and peeling, the device it bore showed plain: a black bat on a field divided bendwise, silver and gold.
Thang an excuse to bat her eyes, reach out and squeeze the biceps of his closest arm, playing the damsel in distress to maximum effect.
He would have seen a bat being thrown from in there, and by the time he turned around to mount, WindStriker had been blinkered and unable to react.
He was about to go after a Beater when the wizard who had dropped his bat before maneuvered his broom so that he could use the twigs to hit a Bludger at Neil, who was oblivious.
He flew toward a Bludger that was flying straight at him and then swung back, grunting loudly, feeling a jolt move through him as he struck it, hearing the ringing sound of metal on metal as one of the iron bands on the bat hit the Bludger.
Then later, when they dropped him from the Bugle Corps because he got the clap and nobody of his many friends stepped forward to go to bat for him and try to get him reinstated, this had increased his loneliness, but it also hardened his invulnerability.
The Wayne team batted and bunted a few balls, and then Homans led them to the bench.