v
(transitive, science fiction) To mindwipe.
v
(transitive) To sweep up (a mess) thoroughly with a broom.
v
To remove plates, etc. from a table after a meal.
v
(intransitive) To cook a group meal outside as a family, workplace or other social unit.
v
To use a cream (cold cream) to remove something (usually makeup, from one's face).
v
(transitive, UK dialectal) To dig up weeds.
n
(Southern England, slang, dated) An act of pulling down the trousers of a person quickly and without consent.
v
(transitive, Northern England, slang) To pull down the trousers of a person quickly and without consent, as a prank.
v
(transitive, Northern England, slang) Alternative spelling of dekeck. [(transitive, Northern England, slang) To pull down the trousers of a person quickly and without consent, as a prank.]
n
(Northern England, slang) Alternative spelling of dekecking. [(Northern England, slang) An act of pulling down the trousers of a person quickly and without consent.]
v
(transitive) To get by digging; to take from the ground; often with up.
v
To cover over by digging.
v
Alternative form of drygulch [(US, slang) To murder; to attack, assault, especially in an ambush.]
v
alternative form of dust off [(transitive) To remove dust from.]
v
(transitive) To cover with dust.
v
(intransitive, Britain) To use a vacuum cleaner, irrespective of brand.
n
(science fiction) The act of mindwiping.
v
(transitive) To absorb the leftovers of a dish with bread etc., in order to eat them.
v
(transitive) To wipe again.
v
(US, informal, especially Pennsylvania) To root or rummage around (in search of something).
v
(transitive) To polish or scrub; to cover (something with a substance) by rubbing.
v
(transitive) To remove unwanted material from something, especially to purify molten metal by removing impurities.
n
Refuse water after scouring.
v
(slang) To remove another's trousers, especially in jest; to depants.
n
The act of emptying a bucket which has been employed as a toilet.
v
To wipe out with a sponge, as letters or writing; to efface; to destroy all trace of.
v
(transitive) To clean the inside of (something) by using a sponge.
n
A school mode of bullying involving holding a person upside down over a toilet bowl, submerging their head, then flushing water.
v
(transitive) To remove dung tags from a sheep.
n
(slang) The prank of defecating in the cistern of a toilet, so that flushing the toilet brings in dirty water instead of clean.
v
(transitive) To remove by rubbing; to rub off; to obliterate; usually followed by away, off, or out.
v
To remove or erase with a wiping motion
v
To remove something by wiping.
v
To try to remove fecal matter from one's buttocks after defecation by wiping.
v
(surfing, intransitive) To fall off one's surfboard.
v
To clean thoroughly, particularly with a dishcloth or rag.
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