Crossword clues for lards
lards
Wiktionary
a. Not numerical; outside the realm of numbers.
n. The state or quality of being conceivable.
vb. (en-past of: decrescendo)
n. Any interface through which there is no transfer of heat or entropy
n. (plural of fly nodot=yes English) (a type of carriage)
vb. (context transitive English) To forgive, excuse or overlook (something).
vb. (en-third-person singular of: endanger)
n. (plural of tin sandwich English)
a. Being, or coming from, a bush of low stature (context used in names of certain fruits, such as lowbush blueberry and lowbush cranberry English).
adv. In a noncooperative manner; not cooperatively; uncooperatively alt. In a noncooperative manner; not cooperatively; uncooperatively
vb. (present participle of overcoddle English)
vb. (en-past of: besnow)
a. copiously decorated with jewelery such as precious stones and precious metal
n. (plural of savinase English)
n. (context analysis English) Of two mappings, a point in the domain of both mappings that has same image under both.
contraction (context nonstandard English) you#English will have.
n. 1 (context grammar English) Verb complement in some languages or some constructions of a given language; the noun which is possessed. 2 The subject of a possession by a demon or spirit.
adv. In a carefree way.
vb. 1 To squeeze a wet material, either by twist with one's hands, or by passing it through a wringer, to remove the water. 2 To force someone to give something, usually truth, or money. 3 (context aviation English) To push an aircraft to its performance limits; to push the envelope.
a. Pertaining to something that can be increase.
vb. (en-pastcarry out)
n. (context vulgar pejorative English) Someone who is strange or awkward; stronger and more vulgar form of (term: weirdo).
vb. (present participle of infirm English)
n. 1 self-deception. (from early 17th c.) 2 (context historical euphemistic English) masturbation. (from 18th c.) 3 self-harm. vb. (context historical euphemistic English) To masturbate.
vb. (present participle of five English)
vb. (en-third-person singularsign out)
alt. 1 (context uncountable English) The act or process of making brutal 2 An instance of being brutalized. n. 1 (context uncountable English) The act or process of making brutal 2 An instance of being brutalized.
n. (alternative form of Superstitial English)
n. (context informal English) Short form of '''president'''.
vb. (en-past of: rehypnotize)
adv. (context chiefly Scotland English) (alternative spelling of once English)
n. 1 A sport where two opponents attempt to subdue each other in bare-handed grappling using techniques of leverage, holding, and pressure points. 2 A professional tumbling act that emulates the sport of wrestling. Also called "professional wrestling". It is distinguished from sport wrestling -- which has strict internationally recognized rules and is conducted on a mat -- by being scripted, rehearsed, conducted in a boxing ring rather than on a mat, and programmed as entertainment. 3 (context countable English) The act of one who wrestles; a struggle to achieve something. vb. (present participle of wrestle English)
n. (plural of magistrature English)
vb. (context transitive English) To provide with a stipend, or salary; to support; to pay.
n. (context anatomy English) A palatine tonsil.
n. 1 (label de colloquial abbreviation) magazine, the publication or ammunition 2 (label de colloquial abbreviation) magnet 3 (label de colloquial abbreviation) mag wheel
vb. (present participle of seroconvert English)
n. A hyperon of short life.
n. 1 One who sells dubious medicines. 2 One who sells by deception; a con artist; a charlatan. vb. 1 (context intransitive English) To act as a mountebank. 2 (context transitive English) To cheat by boasting and false pretenses.
vb. 1 (context obsolete English) To have the same value as. 2 To counteract, counterbalance or neutralize. 3 To compensate for.
alt. (jefe político English) n. (jefe político English)
n. 1 (context uncountable English) The field of medicine concerned with the study, diagnosis(,) and treatment of conditions of the teeth and oral cavity. 2 (context uncountable English) operation performed on teeth and adjoining areas such as drilling, filling cavity(,) and placing crowns and bridges. 3 (context countable English) A dental surgery, an operation on the teeth. 4 (context countable English) A place where dental operations are performed. (qualifier: Not as common as "dentist's office". Compare ''surgery''.)
vb. To focus one's emotional energies on someone or something.
vb. (present participle of geminate English)
n. (plural of topsider English)
vb. (en-third-person singular of: lard)
Usage examples of "lards".
If Arra was right and the next opening of the gate would release more shadows into the world, Lee needed to be as far from the gate as possible-not standing underneath it chatting to the boom operator while Peter went over the reactions he wanted with Laura.
In 1948, Herbert Levine developed an inexpensive, lightweight, spray-on insulation composed of asbestos and rock wool, which played a key part in the postwar office-tower construction boom.
Then it was gone, run down on its boom, as the aviso headed in towards the shore.
De anderen werden met een luid gejuich welkom geheeten en men drong Howard en Eline zeer hunne bewondering voor den boom toch te uiten.
We passed through scattered belts of pinewood, where the wild cat howled and the owl screeched, and across broad stretches of fenland and moor, where the silence was only broken by the booming cry of the bittern or the fluttering of wild duck far above our heads.
Wells clutched the side of the stretcher to keep it from sliding as the powerful machine boomed into the sky, already swinging toward the emergency room at the base hospital.
Patrol boats moved lazily in crisscross patterns, trailing explosive charges that boomed and thudded through the ocean.
He laughed, and I remembered how the sound of his laughter had boomed in that wet, snowy drive from Whitehorse across to Haines Junction, how his teeth had shown white against the black of the forest streaming by.
As Martinez touched his lips with his glass, the front door boomed open and a gust of wind riffled papers on the side table.
The old and new apartments soon boomed to the sounds of saws and hammers, and the air was laden with the scent of glue and varnish and fresh paint.
The fabric flapped like a liberated bird, suddenly catching the wind and throwing the boom hard to port, catching Brod and knocking him into Maia.
Vega bucked and boomed and Momma twisted, snarling, only three feet from Jenny, her rear legs tensing for the killing leap.
There was just the barking of a dog, the boom of migrating chafers, the song of the stream, and of the owls, to proclaim the beating in the heart of this sweet Night.
Stephen Perrivale, and Phyllis his red-headed daughter, and Commander Troton booming cheerfully, and the Brownlows, and poor Coode, who fixed his one pathetic eye on Mary and watched her as she stood between the Twist father and the Twist daughter.
With a dominant share of the booming office copier market, Xerox was growing fast and was very profitable.