n
The act or practice of chewing betel.
adj
(of speech, or other produced sound) Characterized by a burr.
n
(Northern England) A branch of a tree; a branch of broom or gorse.
n
One who champs (bites or chews).
n
The sound or action of one who champs (bites or chews).
v
(US) To eat noisily; to champ or chomp.
n
One of the jaws or cheeks of a vice, etc.
v
(transitive, UK, dialectal) To chew.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To beat with a chabuk.
n
One who chaws; a chewer.
n
The act of chewing; mastication with the mouth.
v
(agriculture) To ruminate (of ruminant animals).
v
Pronunciation spelling of chewing.
n
Obsolete spelling of char [A charred substance.]
v
(transitive, UK, dialect) To chew.
n
(obsolete) Alternative form of chinch [The bedbug (Cimex lectularius).]
n
(Scotland, slang) Cocaine.
v
(transitive, informal) To fit (an animal) with a microchip.
v
(transitive) To stuff (food) into one's mouth or cheeks, sometimes as part of competitive eating.
v
(Midlands, Yorkshire) To chew into small pieces.
n
The act of chomping (see below)
n
(rare) One who, or that which, chomps.
adj
(informal, rare) Chewy.
adj
(Midlands, Wales) Inclined to chopse; excessively talkative in an irritating or disrespectful manner.
v
(slang, South Africa) To eat.
v
(obsolete) To champ; to bite.
v
(UK, East Anglia) To use a crome.
n
A person or thing that crunches.
n
(slang) tinea cruris; jock itch
n
A rodent or other animal that gnaws.
n
(US, military, slang) Synonym of gravel cruncher
n
(colloquial, eastern Ohio) a contrarian.
v
(literary) To chew; to masticate.
v
(transitive) To chew (food).
n
A point in time while chewing.
n
(informal) A point in time while eating, partway through a bite.
v
To chew, especially with the molar teeth.
v
Obsolete form of munch. [(often with "on") To chew with a grinding, crunching sound, and with the mouth closed.]
n
The act or sound of one who nibbles.
n
A small piece of something, especially of snack food.
n
A cylindrical blowing device that consists of a mouthpiece, which may or may not be a whistle, attached to a coiled tube of paper, given to guests and used at large celebrations especially New Year's Eve, or birthdays. When the mouthpiece is blown into, the paper tube unravels and a humorous festive noise is produced.
n
(US and Canada, especially Appalachia and the Prairies) The practice of blowing pepper or snuff through a quill into the nose of a woman who is giving birth, to induce sneezing and diaphragmatic contractions which will induce or hasten labor.
v
Obsolete form of ragout. [(transitive) To prepare (food) as a ragout.]
v
To eat noisily, as with one's mouth open.
n
(Lancashire) A little snack; tiny tidbits of food
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