The Collaborative International Dictionary
Pouch \Pouch\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Pouched; p. pr. & vb. n. Pouching.]
To put or take into a pouch.
To swallow; -- said of fowls.
--Derham.To pout. [Obs.]
--Ainsworth.To pocket; to put up with. [R.]
--Sir W. Scott.
Wiktionary
vb. (present participle of pouch English)
Usage examples of "pouching".
Philip was beginning to show signs of age - his black hair and beard speckled with silver, the skin pouching below his eyes.
Reaching into the pouching fold of her fur for stones, she selected a particular wolf.
I think that from their poetry I know what it meant to live in a land where the nursing or pouching of an infant not one’s own was not the highest form of devotion and sacrifice, but was actually taboo.
Before they could answer, she made an approving and speculative face, pouching out her lips, and said, “It’s damned scary.
All they could see as they descended into the dwindling light was a high bluff and a bay pouching darkly below.