n
Internet users who are paid by the authorities of the People's Republic of China to spread propaganda and disinformation on their behalf.
n
A promontory (usually fortified with a citadel) forming the hub of many Grecian cities, and around which many were built for defensive purposes before and during the classical period; compare Acropolis.
n
(Canadian politics) Action démocratique du Québec (a political party in Quebec)
v
(UK, West Country, Devon, obsolete) quoth he.
n
Alternative letter-case form of Anzac Day. [April 25, a public holiday in Australia and New Zealand that originally commemorated the sacrifices made by members of the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps (ANZAC) who fought at Gallipoli against the Ottoman Empire during World War I, and now honours people from those countries who have served in all wars, conflicts, and peacekeeping operations.]
n
The name of the Latin-script letter R.
n
(Australia, informal) associate professor
n
(Australia, affectionate nickname) The ABC (Australian Broadcasting Commission).
n
The aurora of the southern hemisphere
n
Abbreviation of Avestan. [An ancient Eastern Old Iranian language that was used to compose the sacred hymns and canon of the Zoroastrian Avesta.]
n
(historical) Operation Barbarossa: the 1941 Nazi German invasion of the Soviet Union in World War II, named after the emperor.
n
(law) Abbreviation of brotherhood. [The state of being brothers or a brother (also figuratively).]
n
Alternative form of bimmer
n
(Oxford University slang) The Bodleian Library.
n
(UK) Abbreviation of builders' tea.
n
Alternative spelling of Can.
n
grass script (a style of cursive script used in Chinese calligraphy).
n
(informal) One of several denominations of triangular postage stamps issued by the Cape of Good Hope during the period 1853-1864.
adj
Of or pertaining to the constellation Centaurus, to any star of the constellation or to a fictional or hypothetical species, civilisation, colony, etc., associated with such a star.
n
(US, slang) New York City
n
(informal) A nickname for Paris.
n
(Isle of Man) A non-Manx person living in the Isle of Man.
n
Any of the horizontal directions indicated on a compass. There may be 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, or even 128 compass points on a compass, depending on its size and accuracy.
n
A private bank, famously that of Queen Elizabeth
n
(Oxbridge) An intercollegiate sporting competition, open to all colleges.
v
Alternative form of tharf
n
(in place name histories) Domesday Book
n
(historical) An old Welsh system of laws that defined various units of measure.
n
(historical) The year 1672, in the context of Dutch history, in which the Dutch Republic was invaded by France, and faced the threat of a naval blockade by the English (a plan which was later abandoned after the Battle of Solebay).
n
Ellipsis of Domesday Book. [(historical) The Book of Winchester; the principal record of the Domesday survey of England carried out in 1086 for William the Conqueror, comprising of two volumes: the Great Domesday Book and the Little Domesday Book.]
n
(slang) The Area 51 military base in Nevada, United States.
v
To move in a changing direction, forming the shape of a letter S.
n
(meteorology) The strongest kind of extratropical cyclone occurring across the continent of Europe, associated with areas of low atmospheric pressure.
n
(dated, dialectal) An island.
n
(informal) Short for Fontainebleau., a town. [A town in the metropolitan area of Paris, in Seine-et-Marne department, Île-de-France, France, home to a royal French palace.]
n
(informal) An identity card given to aliens who are resident in Japan.
n
Alternative spelling of Gallophone
n
The state police force of the Republic of Ireland.
n
Ellipsis of Great Firewall of China. [(originally humorous, derogatory) Government censorship of the Internet in the People's Republic of China.]
n
(originally humorous, derogatory) Government censorship of the Internet in the People's Republic of China.
n
(metonymically) The Greenwich meridian; the prime meridian.
adv
(fandom slang) Initialism of happily ever after. [(idiomatic, often preceded by "they lived") Happily until death; used in a formulaic ending for fairy tales.]
n
An area in Los Angeles, known as the center of the American motion picture industry.
n
(historical) the dominant Polish resistance movement in Poland, occupied by Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, during World War II.
n
(UK, law, historical) The southeastern circuit of assize, including the Home Counties (except Middlesex) and Cambridgeshire, Norfolk, and Suffolk.
n
(geography) Abbreviation of heights., as found in placenames [A neighborhood or other development built on a hill or mountain.]
n
Alternative letter-case form of IKEA [An international, originally Swedish home products retailer that sells modern, utilitarian design furniture, much of which is assembled by the consumer.]
n
Alternative spelling of katakana [(uncountable) A Japanese syllabary used when writing words borrowed from foreign languages other than Chinese, specific names of plants and animals and other jargon, onomatopoeia, or to emphasize a word or phrase. Also used to write the Ainu language.]
n
(chiefly Scotland) A churchyard, especially one in Scotland.
n
Synonym of von Kármán vortex street
n
Alternative form of meltemi [(meteorology) A strong, dry, northerly, seasonal wind in the Aegean sea; etesian wind.]
adj
(historical) Of or relating to the Legio XII Fulminata ("Thunderbolt Twelfth Legion") of the Imperial Roman army.
n
(US, informal) Synonym of Aeolis Mons (a mountain on Mars)
n
Britain standard form of Mr.. Abbreviation of March.
n
Alternative letter-case form of Nadsat. [The Russian-influenced argot used by the teenage protagonists in Anthony Burgess's novel A Clockwork Orange (1962).]
adj
Abbreviation of natural. [Existing in the nature of a person or thing; innate, not acquired or learned.]
n
Abbreviation of newborn. [A recently born baby.]
n
(now dialectal) The peak of a flat cap.
n
(historical) In Irish history, a man of science or learning, equivalent to a university professor.
n
A violent wind from the west or southwest, which sweeps over the pampas of South America and the adjacent seas, often doing great damage.
n
Alternative form of para-nordic
n
Alternative form of para-nordic
n
Alternative form of Phoney War [(historical) During World War Two, the period of limited military activity from the outbreak of hostilities on September 3rd, 1939 until Germany's attack on the Low Countries on May 10th, 1940.]
n
Rainbow Labor Queensland.
n
(historical) The Irish police force when Ireland was part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
n
(historical) Northern Ireland's police force from 1922 to 2001.
n
Abbreviation of Saint. [A title given to a saint, often prefixed to the person's name.]
n
(historical) An alliance of intelligence services formed in 1976 to fight the Cold War in Africa. Its formal members were Iran, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Israel, Morocco and France.
n
The Security Service of Ukraine, the law enforcement authority and main intelligence and security agency of the Ukrainian government.
n
Initialism of San Francisco. [A major coastal city in California of over 800,000 widely known for its unique culture, architecture, and LGBT population; formerly Yerba Buena (pre-1847).]
n
Initialism of single (unmarried) Jewish female. [(music) A 45 RPM vinyl record with one song on side A and one on side B.]
n
(UK, slang, derogatory, obsolete) The University of London.
n
the standard sequence in which a Chinese character is written in Chinese, Japanese or Korean writing
n
(fandom slang) Abbreviation of Pokémon Sword and Shield.
n
(countable, Northern Ireland) Training and employment agency.
adj
Passing through a peninsula.
n
(navigation) Direction relative to true north, typically as contrasted with magnetic bearing.
n
Alternative form of TZO; Abbreviation of Thorne-Żytkow object.
n
The devolution of security and policing to Northern Irish forces such as the Royal Ulster Constabulary.
n
(rare, chiefly India) A person who travels in space for the Indian space program; an Indian astronaut.
n
The letter for the w sound in Pitman shorthand.
n
netspeak based on the English language
n
A hypothetical world war following World War III.
n
(anthropology) Initialism of younger father's brother's son.; father's brother's son younger than oneself
n
(US, military) Abbreviation of yeoman. [(UK) An official providing honorable service in a royal or high noble household, ranking between a squire and a page. Especially, a yeoman of the guard, a member of a ceremonial bodyguard to the UK monarch (not to be confused with a Yeoman Warder).]
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