n
(slang) Large ship-building rivets, nuts, bolts and other metal scrap used as missiles by Protestant shipyard workers during sectarian rioting in Belfast.
n
(Cockney rhyming slang) A laugh.
n
(Scotland, obsolete) A brewing of ale.
n
Alternative form of chawkie [A young silkworm that has not yet reached its second moult stage.]
n
(slang) A microchip expert.
n
(childish) A spoonful of food (when encouraging a spoon-fed child to eat).
n
(UK, dialect) The burdock.
v
(transitive, now dialectal) To put or store (something) in a crock or pot.
n
Alternative form of crudité [(food) A crispy raw vegetable; an individual piece of crudités.]
n
(Scotland) skirret, a root vegetable
n
(obsolete, East Anglia and Essex) A tuft or clump, especially an unploughed patch amongst fields of corn.
n
(Scotland) A cigarette butt.
n
(UK, slang, humorous, obsolete) A ditch.
n
An illicit street trader; one who engages in fly-pitching.
n
Synonym of grunt (“dessert of steamed berries and dough”)
n
(Ireland; Britain, especially Manchester, Cockney and Glaswegian; slang) A place of residence.
n
(informal) A vehicle that consumes a large amount of fuel.
n
(US, military, slang) A canteen or snack bar.
n
(Yorkshire, chiefly Sheffield, dialect) A ginnel.
n
(archaic, UK, dialect or slang) A spoon.
n
Alternative form of gong farmer [(obsolete) One who dug out and removed human excrement from privies and cesspits.]
n
(UK, obsolete) A kind of beef stew thickened with groats.
n
(New Zealand, historical) The work of a gumdigger, digging for kauri gum.
n
A receptacle for discarded clam or lobster shells, often a large bowl or small bucket placed directly on the table during a meal.
n
(UK, dialect, West Country, Devon, dated) groats; hulled grain
n
Obsolete form of hordock. [(nonce word, used only by Shakespeare) A plant, possibly burdock.]
n
(Britain, dialectal) A sea mist
n
Alternative form of high toby [(UK, slang, obsolete) The high road.]
v
(intransitive, obsolete, rare) To have or have not; to give or take.
n
(Western Pennsylvania, dialectal) A thorn from a bush. See jaggerbush.
adj
Having been cooked by jugging.
n
Mix of sawdust, grit, etc. used to provide a soiling area for pet cats.
n
(Scotland) A small loaf of bread; a snack
n
(UK dialectal) A speck or spot.
n
(colloquial, soccer) a nutmeg
n
(UK, Scotland, dialect, obsolete) A meal.
n
(Scotland) A pit or slough in a bog.
n
Alternative form of muckender [(obsolete) A handkerchief.]
n
Alternative form of muckender [(obsolete) A handkerchief.]
n
(colloquial) An act of eating.
n
(obsolete) Offal; waste animal product; organic matter unfit for consumption.
n
(chiefly Scotland) The swede (rutabaga), called "turnip" in Scotland.
n
(informal) Any food suitable for nibbling, snack food.
n
Obsolete form of nouch. [(obsolete) An ouche; a jewel.]
n
(countable) A tidbit of something valuable.
n
(informal) A retail product, especially a collectible, that has very high supply and very low demand.
v
(Northern England, Scotland, transitive, intransitive) To eat sparingly.
n
Alternative form of placcy [(UK, Ireland, slang) plastic]
n
Alternative form of pond scum [Algae, especially when growing on the surface of a pond.]
n
(chiefly historical) Dung (of dogs, fowls, etc) used in tanning, after applying lime, to soften skins.
v
(of a horse) To let food drop from the mouth whilst chewing.
n
(UK, slang, obsolete) Synonym of Rag and Famish (“the Army and Navy Club in London, England”)
v
(UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) To cream; mantle; foam; froth.
n
Alternative form of riddle me ree [(countable) A riddle, a verbal puzzle.]
n
(UK, dialect) A partridge.
n
(obsolete, rare) A person wearing a rug.
n
(UK, dialect) urine from a cowhouse
v
(Britain, Newfoundland, slang) To eat food quickly.
n
Any article of merchandise of a grade inferior to the best; especially, a coarse or inferior kind of flour.
v
Of a female farm animal: to drink its own milk.
n
A waste product or byproduct from processing whales or fish.
n
(UK) Fine clay or ochre made up into balls, used for marking sheep.
n
(colloquial) Something stale; a loaf of bread or the like that is no longer fresh.
n
(art, literature) A jumble, especially one that lacks intellectual coherence.
n
(Scotland) A dainty or delicacy.
n
(obsolete) A ball of some aromatic substance.
v
(transitive) To feed swill to (pigs).
n
A generic version of the snack food.
n
(Britain, dialect, chiefly Yorkshire, horticulture) (Usually plural) The parts of weed roots that remain viable in the ground after inadequate digging prior to cultivation.
n
(obsolete, Scotland, Orkney) Peat bog.
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.
Our daily word games Threepeat and Compound Your Joy are going strong. Bookmark and enjoy!
Today's secret word is 7 letters and means "Property or assets, excluding real estate." Can you find it?