n
Alternative form of banj (Quercus leucotrichophora). [(historical, Islamic countries, uncountable) Hashish or henbane.]
n
Alternative form of cadjan [A form of parchment made from leaves of the coconut palm, formerly used in Asia.]
n
Alternative form of canakin [(archaic) A little can or cup.]
n
Alternative form of canakin [(archaic) A little can or cup.]
n
Alternative form of canakin [(archaic) A little can or cup.]
n
Alternative form of chakazi (“variety of copal”) [A variety of copal.]
n
Alternative form of chinquapin [Allegheny chinkapin (Castanea pumila)]
n
Alternative form of cinchona (“bark of the tree”) [A tree or shrub of the genus Cinchona, native to the Andes in South America but since widely cultivated in Indonesia and India as well for its medicinal bark.]
n
Alternative form of chinquapin. [Allegheny chinkapin (Castanea pumila)]
n
Alternative form of chinkerinchee [Ornithogalum thyrsoides, a flowering plant endemic to the Cape Province in South Africa.]
n
Alternative form of enokitake [enoki mushroom]
n
Alternative form of gutka [A preparation of crushed areca nut, tobacco, catechu, paraffin, slaked lime and sweet or savoury flavourings, chewed recreationally in India.]
n
Alternative form of jeniquen
n
Alternative form of hiera picra [(pharmacology, now historical) A warming cathartic medicine made from aloes and canella.]
n
Alternative form of Jack-in-the-pulpit [A woodland plant of northern Europe, Arum maculatum.]
n
Alternative form of jinriksha [Synonym of rickshaw]
n
A Brazilian folk-medicine specialist in the preparation of jurema
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of khaini [A form of chewing tobacco used in India, containing slaked lime.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of canakin [(archaic) A little can or cup.]
n
(dialectal) Alternative form of kilk (“charlock”) (Sinapis arvensis etc.) [(dialectal) Synonym of charlock (en, Sinapis arvensis etc.)]
n
Alternative spelling of kif [A kind of cannabis smoked in Morocco and Algeria, for narcotic or intoxicating effect.]
n
Alternative form of kikar (“kind of tree”) [A tree native to South Asia, Vachellia nilotica, formerly Acacia arabica var nilotica.]
n
Alternative spelling of kif [A kind of cannabis smoked in Morocco and Algeria, for narcotic or intoxicating effect.]
n
Alternative form of kiefekil [(mineralogy) A kind of clay; meerschaum.]
n
A form of chewing tobacco used in India, containing slaked lime.
n
Alternative spelling of kilikiti [A variant of cricket, originating in Samoa and now played throughout Polynesia, with three-sided wooden bats and teams of no fixed size.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
(dialectal) Synonym of charlock (en, Sinapis arvensis etc.)
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kimblewick [A type of bit that has bit shanks, D rings, and a curb chain]
n
Alternative form of kimblewick [A type of bit that has bit shanks, D rings, and a curb chain]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of chincough (“whooping cough”) [whooping cough]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick (any of the plants used in this mixture). [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.
n
Alternative form of kinnikinnick [A mixture of bark, dried leaves, and often berries and/or tobacco, which is smoked.]
n
Alternative form of kippen [(dialectal) A piece of small firewood or kindling; dibber]
n
Alternative spelling of kilikiti [A variant of cricket, originating in Samoa and now played throughout Polynesia, with three-sided wooden bats and teams of no fixed size.]
n
Alternative form of Kitchawan [Former name of Croton (river in New York).]
n
Alternative form of Kitchawan [Former name of Croton (river in New York).]
n
Alternative form of kex [(obsolete or dialectal) The dried stem of certain large herbaceous plants.]
n
Alternative form of kankar [Detrital or residual calcium carbonate, rolled and often nodular, formed in soils of semi-arid regions.]
n
Alternative form of libken [(obsolete, slang) A house or lodging.]
v
Alternative form of makkin
n
Alternative form of minnerichi [Acacia cyperophylla, a fabaceous tree of Australia.]
n
Alternative form of minnerichi [Acacia cyperophylla, a fabaceous tree of Australia.]
n
Alternative form of minnerichi [Acacia cyperophylla, a fabaceous tree of Australia.]
n
Alternative form of minnerichi [Acacia cyperophylla, a fabaceous tree of Australia.]
n
Alternative form of moschofilero
n
Alternative form of nabk [Either of two thorny shrublike trees, of the genus Ziziphus, from North Africa and the Middle East; Ziziphus spina-christi is supposed to be the plant from which Christ's crown of thorns was made.]
n
Alternative form of namkeen [(India) Any savoury snack eaten between meals.]
n
Alternative form of nankeen [A type of cotton cloth originally from Nanking in China.]
n
Alternative form of nicker nut [The rounded seed of the nicker tree.]
n
(Australia) Chewing tobacco.
n
Alternative form of nuckelavee [An aquatic horse-like demon from Orcadian mythology, said to cause droughts and epidemics and to harm crops and animals.]
n
Alternative form of parabaik [The traditional form of paper in Burma, made of daphne bark agglutinated into a kind of pasteboard and blackened with charcoal paste, then folded and written on with a steatite pencil.]
n
Alternative form of pinocembrin [A flavanone found in damiana, honey, fingerroot, and propolis.]
n
Obsolete form of hickory. [(countable) Any of various deciduous hardwood trees of the genus Carya or Annamocarya.]
n
Alternative form of pyinkado [Burmese ironwood, Xylia xylocarpa]
n
Alternative form of quinnat [Oncorhynchus tshawytscha, the chinook salmon.]
n
Alternative form of ramie [(usually countable) A tall, tropical Asian perennial herb, Boehmeria nivea, cultivated for its fibrous stems.]
n
Alternative form of simkin [(India, slang, archaic, British India) champagne]
n
Alternative form of sintoc [A spice used in the East Indies, consisting of the bark of a species of Cinnamomum sintok.]
n
Alternative form of sonnykins [A familiar form of address for a boy or young man.]
n
Alternative form of spillikin [One of the straws (or small pieces of wood, ivory, etc.) used in the game of jackstraws or spillikins.]
n
Alternative spelling of spillikins [A game in which players attempt to remove flat, carved sticks of ivory or wood (the individual spillikins of meaning 1.) from a scattered pile without disturbing any stick other than the one currently being removed.]
n
Alternative form of twankay [(archaic) A variety of green tea.]
n
Alternative form of wheki (“the tree fern Dicksonia squarrosa”) [Dicksonia squarrosa, a fast-growing tree fern endemic to New Zealand.]
n
(very rare) Alternative form of yoncopin [(US, Mississippi, dialect) Nelumbo lutea, the American lotus, the water chinkapin.]
n
Alternative form of yen pok (“opium pellet for smoking”) [An opium pellet for smoking.]
n
(rare) Alternative form of yoncopin [(US, Mississippi, dialect) Nelumbo lutea, the American lotus, the water chinkapin.]
n
Alternative form of zenik [(archaic) The meerkat or suricate.]
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