Wiktionary
vb. (context idiomatic English) To speak the truth; to say things as they really are.
n. (plural of tun English)
adv. With a thwacking sound.
n. 1 the handle of a broom - a tool used to sweep the floor 2 ''(witchcraft)'' A broom, imbued with magic enabling one to fly riding the handle.
n. A clock mounted on a wall.
n. A particular anticholinergic used as a mydriatic to permit better examination of the eye.
a. Of or pertaining to a provirus
vb. 1 (context transitive English) To defecate 2 (context intransitive English) To quit due to tiredness
n. incorrect form; quality of being malformed
n. 1 A perceived superiority based on nationality or ethnicity. 2 The belief that a particular nation is inherently superior to others.
vb. (present participle of overgaze English)
n. (alternative spelling of janggi English)
vb. (en-third-person singularpeter out)
n. (context slang English) A drunkard.
vb. (en-past of: scope out)
alt. 1 (context British English) The cuff on a trouser leg that is, or can be turned up. 2 The next card taken from the top of a pack of cards and displayed. n. 1 (context British English) The cuff on a trouser leg that is, or can be turned up. 2 The next card taken from the top of a pack of cards and displayed.
n. 1 The act or process of putting in; infusion. 2 That which is put in, as in an amount. 3 contribution, or share in a contribution. 4 Something fed into a process with the intention of it shaping or affecting the outputs of that process. vb. 1 (context transitive English) To put in; put on. 2 (context transitive English) To enter#Verb dat
3 (context transitive English) To accept data that is entered.
n. (plural of pudwhacker English)
n. The act or process of eroticize.
n. 1 (context obsolete English) The act of insulting; abusive or insolent treatment; insult. 2 (context obsolete English) exultation
n. A form of therapeutic intervention, used mainly with autistic children, in which the therapist meets the child at its current developmental level and entices it to move up a hierarchy of developmental milestones.
vb. (present participle of ozonize English)
n. (context obsolete English) skeleton
Usage examples of "ottomy".
Burt Britten noticed as he crossed the south portals onto the House floor was that Tommy Langston had nodded off at his desk again.
The portal creaked inward and faces peered out, sallow in the glow of cheap tallow dips, or brosy with drink and primed to proffer lewd comment.
The Market seemed to be bustling, carts full of flowers and vegetables being pushed through the portals, customers coming and going.
Sumantra followed the guru in, then turned to see Mantri Jabali still standing outside the portal.
Niallan murmured, touching his shoulder in reassurance as they changed places on the Portal square.
Chapter Four: THE HALL OF PRIEST-KINGS As I followed the man who called himself Parp down the stone passage the portal behind me closed.
In his other hand the barbarian held Aegis-fang ready, not wanting to swing through the planar portal but hoping for something more vulnerable than an arm to come through to his world.
Apparently the glassy image of the planar portal had been more than just an image.
No wolf, for a year past, has been heard to bark, or known to range among the dwellings, except that single one, whose grisly head, with a plash of blood beneath it, is now affixed to the portal of the meeting-house.
The entrance to this temple is through a magnificent propylon, that is, a portal flanked by massy pyramidal moles.
The portal before which the pyrotic had stood so long, so many hours, gazing so deep into inverspace.
The portal before which the pyrotic had stood so long, so many hours, gazing so deeply into inverspace.
The portal swung wider, making loud protest in the still night, and Ramonda motioned them in.
Tweet recrowned himself with his new Stetson, turned, and strolled impressively toward his tent, disappearing between its lazily flapping portals.
Both Fidelma and Eadulf turned together as an elderly religieuse paused on the portal.