All English words - page 4581
Meanings of Puckerer:
nounA person who or thing which puckers, in various senses; one who puckers the lips to whistle, kiss, etc.; something that causes the lips or face to pucker.
Meanings of Puckerers:
nounA person who or thing which puckers, in various senses; one who puckers the lips to whistle, kiss, etc.; something that causes the lips or face to pucker.
Meanings of Puckering:
verb(especially with reference to a person's face) tightly gather or contract into wrinkles or small folds.
Usage examples:
The child's face puckered, ready to cry
nounA tightly gathered wrinkle or small fold.
Usage examples:
A pucker between his eyebrows
Meanings of Puckers:
verb(especially with reference to a person's face) tightly gather or contract into wrinkles or small folds.
Usage examples:
The child's face puckered, ready to cry
nounA tightly gathered wrinkle or small fold.
Usage examples:
A pucker between his eyebrows
Meanings of Puckery:
adjectiveCausing your mouth to pucker (= become tighter until small folds appear), usually because of being sour
Usage examples:
We ate onion tart with a puckery sauce, and warm potato salad., the succulent chunks of firm, white…
Meanings of Puckish:
adjectivePlayful, especially in a mischievous way.
Usage examples:
A puckish sense of humour
Meanings of Puckishly:
adverbIn a way that is puckish (= typical of someone who takes pleasure in causing trouble, but may be funny and attractive)
Usage examples:
The writing is a mix of the colloquial and the puckishly clever., she remembers, puckishly, an inci…
Meanings of Pucks:
nounA black disc made of hard rubber, used in ice hockey.
Usage examples:
The players carry around hunks of lumber called sticks, which they used to hit a slab of hard rubbe…
Meanings of Pudder:
verbTo go poking about; to meddle; to dabble in something; to potter or puddle around.
Meanings of Pudding:
nounA cooked sweet dish served after the main course of a meal.
Usage examples:
A rice pudding
Meanings of Puddings:
nounA cooked sweet dish served after the main course of a meal.
Usage examples:
A rice pudding
Meanings of Puddingstone:
nounA conglomerate rock in which dark-coloured round pebbles contrast with a paler fine-grained matrix.
Usage examples:
This is a single 12 ft long, hand-coloured pull-out sheet depicting a landscape with cartoon figure…
Meanings of Puddle:
nounA small pool of liquid, especially of rainwater on the ground.
Usage examples:
Splashing through deep puddles
verbWet or cover (a surface) with water, especially rainwater.
Usage examples:
The cobbles under our feet were wet and puddled
Meanings of Puddle jumper:
nounA small light aeroplane which is fast and manoeuvrable and used for short trips.
Usage examples:
A scant decade ago, a sales visit to wal-mart likely entailed flying a puddle jumper into the colle…
Meanings of Puddled:
verbWet or cover (a surface) with water, especially rainwater.
Usage examples:
The cobbles under our feet were wet and puddled
nounA small pool of liquid, especially of rainwater on the ground.
Usage examples:
Splashing through deep puddles
Meanings of Puddles:
nounA small pool of liquid, especially of rainwater on the ground.
Usage examples:
Splashing through deep puddles
verbWet or cover (a surface) with water, especially rainwater.
Usage examples:
The cobbles under our feet were wet and puddled
Meanings of Puddling:
verbWet or cover (a surface) with water, especially rainwater.
Usage examples:
The cobbles under our feet were wet and puddled
nounA small pool of liquid, especially of rainwater on the ground.
Usage examples:
Splashing through deep puddles
Meanings of Puddock:
nounA toad or frog.
Usage examples:
A mill dam with trout and puddocks in it
Meanings of Puddy:
nounThe banded or grove snail, cepaea nemoralis; (also pooty shell) the shell of this.
adjectivePretty.
adverbPretty.
Meanings of Pudencies:
nounModesty or embarrassment.
Usage examples:
‘pudic,’ from the latin pudere, ‘to be ashamed,’ does not translate; in english the closest derivat…
Meanings of Pudency:
nounModesty or embarrassment.
Usage examples:
‘pudic,’ from the latin pudere, ‘to be ashamed,’ does not translate; in english the closest derivat…
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