Concept cluster: Social systems > Pets and pet care
n
A facility providing such shelter.
n
A service, offered by some hotels, of the use of a baby monitor in a guest's room.
v
(rare) To wear a child, to carry them close to the body.
n
(Britain) A boy or man who sells goods – especially fruit or vegetables – from a barrow; a costermonger.
n
(obsolete, cant) A peddler of obscene books and other small items.
n
(obsolete) A woman's ornament; habiliment.
n
(archaic or chiefly dialectal) A corn merchant, especially one in Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
n
(US, dialect) A tailor's female assistant for repairing garments.
n
A female Bushman.
n
Synonym of baby talk
n
A place where cats board when their owners are on holiday.
n
The practice in which babies and young children sleep with one or both parents.
n
(archaic) A female cook.
n
The community or profession of costermongers.
n
The trade of a costermonger.
n
(informal) cowgirl
n
An agricultural worker who uses a cradle (a kind of broad scythe).
v
Of a baby: to be left alone to cry until falling asleep (recommended in some approaches to parenting).
adj
(informal) Synonym of in the doghouse (“subject to someone's anger and disapproval, especially one's spouse”)
n
A young man who loafs around town, especially a lady's man who hangs out in public places in an attempt to pick up girls.
v
To take a vacation in a dude ranch.
n
(costermongers) The number six.
n
A boy or young man who works on a farm
n
A person employed to maintain the game for hunting and all associated materials and effects. Often shortened to keeper.
n
(historical) A seller of garlic.
n
(mining, historical) Either of a pair of young boys employed as putters, pushing wagons in the mine, and dividing their earnings.
n
(Scotland, US, colloquial, chiefly African-American Vernacular) Alternative form of haunt, haint (“ghost”) [A place at which one is regularly found; a habitation or hangout.]
n
Alternative spelling of headhunter [(anthropology) A person who practises headhunting, the taking and preserving of a person's head after killing them.]
n
Alternative spelling of headhunter [(anthropology) A person who practises headhunting, the taking and preserving of a person's head after killing them.]
n
(obsolete) A funeral ceremony.
n
A woman who trades in ice or is employed to deliver block ice.
n
Alternative form of kembster [(archaic, historical) A woman who cleans or combs out wool]
n
(slang) A mental hospital.
n
The keeper of a menagerie of animals.
v
(intransitive) To breastfeed: to be fed at the breast.
v
(obsolete) To nurse.
v
Pronunciation spelling of nurse. [(transitive) To breastfeed: to feed (a baby) at the breast; to suckle.]
n
(Portland, slang) A parks and recreation professional.
n
(informal) The owner of a pet dog or cat.
n
(informal) Time off work granted to an employee to take care of their pets.
n
An establishment which provides shelter and/or care to sufferers of pestilence or other contagious infections
n
An animal kept as a companion.
n
A rock one keeps and cares for as if it were a pet, often purchased as a novelty item and jokingly treated as having needs like those of a living animal.
n
A shop that sells domestic animals and products for feeding and caring for them.
v
Alternative form of petsit [To babysit for (take care of) a pet.]
n
(social media, marketing) An animal used as an influencer.
n
One who keeps a domestic animal, or pet.
n
The keeping of domestic animals, or pets.
v
To babysit for (take care of) a pet.
n
A zoo that permits or encourages visitors to touch animals.
n
Someone who works at or has worked at Philmont, for instance as a ranger.
n
(UK) Alternative spelling of plowwoman [(US) A female plower, who plows land with a plow.]
n
Ranch or trail foreman, usually the first or second person in charge. The person responsible for getting the work done.
n
(historical, slang, US) Any of the miners who wore red bandanas for identification during the West Virginia mine war of 1921.
n
A haunted house.
adj
(informal) Resembling or characteristic of a stalker.
v
To make virile and manly.
n
The person in charge of a stall (small open-fronted shop).
n
A stockman or stockwoman
n
A domesticated animal used in pet therapy.
n
(colloquial, US) A veteran (a former soldier or other member of armed forces).
n
A person who takes care of and rehabilitates injured wildlife.
n
(historical) A title assumed by in 1645, by Matthew Hopkins an English witch-hunter.
n
Alternative form of witch hunter [A person employed to find witches as part of a witch-hunt; a witchfinder.]
n
Alternative form of zookeeper [A person employed at a zoo to attend to the animals.]
n
Work in a zoo, feeding and caring for the animals.

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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