(slang) One who manufactures illegal drugs; a cook.
Any cook.
The head cook of a restaurant or other establishment.
The presiding cook in the kitchen of a large household.
verb
(MLE, transitive) To stab with a knife, to shank.
(stative, informal) To work as a chef; to prepare and cook food professionally.
efph
ehfa
fahr
fahy
fash
fash
noun
(Scotland, Tyneside, Northern England) A worry; trouble; bother.
(slang, especially UK) A fascist, a member of the far-right.
(slang, in the plural, especially UK) The far-right, especially violent far-right demonstrators, collectively.
verb
(intransitive, Scotland, Tyneside, Northern England) To trouble oneself; to take pains.
(slang) To make something fascist.
(transitive, Scotland, Tyneside, Northern England) To worry; to bother, annoy.
fath
fdhd
fehq
fehs
fhma
fhst
fikh
fiqh
fiqh
noun
(Islam) Jurisprudence in the Islamic law, shari'a.
fish
fish
noun
(Newfoundland) Cod; codfish.
(archaic or loosely) Any animal (or any vertebrate) that lives exclusively in water.
(cartomancy) The thirty-fourth Lenormand card.
(countable) A cold-blooded vertebrate animal that lives in water, moving with the help of fins and breathing with gills.
(countable, nautical) A makeshift overlapping longitudinal brace, originally shaped roughly like a fish, used to temporarily repair or extend a spar or mast of a ship.
(countable, nautical, military, slang) A torpedo (self-propelled explosive device).
(countable, poker slang) A bad poker player. Compare shark (a good poker player).
(countable, slang) An easy victim for swindling.
(nautical) A purchase used to fish the anchor.
(obsolete) A counter, used in various games.
(prison slang) A new (usually vulnerable) prisoner.
(uncountable) A card game in which the object is to obtain cards in pairs or sets of four (depending on the variation), by asking the other players for cards of a particular rank.
(uncountable) The flesh of the fish used as food.
(uncountable, derogatory, slang) A woman.
A period of time spent fishing.
An instance of seeking something.
Class Chondrichthyes, cartilaginous fish such as sharks and rays
Class Myxini, the hagfish (no vertebra)
Class Petromyzontida, the lampreys (no jaw)
Superclass Osteichthyes, bony fish.
verb
(fishing, transitive) To use as bait when fishing.
(intransitive) To (attempt to) find or get hold of an object by searching among other objects.
(intransitive) To hunt fish or other aquatic animals in a body of water.
(intransitive, cricket) Of a batsman, to attempt to hit a ball outside off stump and miss it.
(intransitive, followed by "for" or "around for") To talk to people in an attempt to get them to say something, or seek to obtain something by artifice.
(nautical, transitive) To hoist the flukes of.
(nautical, transitive) To repair (a spar or mast) by fastening a beam or other long object (often called a fish) over the damaged part (see Noun above).
(transitive) To search (a body of water) for something other than fish.
foah
foch
fohn
fosh
fpha
froh
fthm
fwhm
haaf
haaf
noun
(fishing, Shetland) the practice of sea fishing for such as cod, ling and tusk
(fishing, Shetland, Scotland) the open sea, especially as a place to fish
haff
haft
haft
noun
(Northern English dialect) A piece of mountain pasture to which a farm animal has become hefted.
The handle of a tool or weapon.
verb
(transitive) To fit a handle to (a tool or weapon); to grip by the handle
half
half
adj
(of a relative other than a sibling) Related through one common grandparent or ancestor rather than two.
(of a sibling) Having one parent (rather than two) in common.
Consisting of a half (½, 50%).
Consisting of some indefinite portion resembling a half; approximately a half, whether more or less; partial; imperfect.
adv
In some part approximating a half.
In two equal parts or to an equal degree.
Partially; imperfectly.
Practically, nearly.
intj
(theater) A call reminding performers that the performance will begin in thirty minutes.
noun
(UK, archaic) A child ticket.
(numismatic slang) Clipping of half-dollar.
(preceded by “a” or a number) The fraction obtained by dividing 1 by 2.
(slang) A half sibling.
(sports) One of the two opposite parts of the playing field of various sports, in which each starts the game.
(sports) abbreviated form for half marathon.
Any of the three terms at Eton College, for Michaelmas, Lent, and summer.
Half of a standard measure, chiefly: (Britain) half a pint of beer or cider.
One of two usually roughly equal parts into which anything may be divided, or considered as divided.
prep
(UK, Ireland) Half past; a half-hour (30 minutes) after the last hour.
(rare, see usage notes) A half-hour to (preceding) the next hour.
verb
(transitive, obsolete) To halve.
hcfa
hdkf
heaf
heaf
noun
(Northern England) A piece of mountain pasture to which a farm animal has become hefted; a heft.
verb
(Northern England) (of farm animals, especially a flock of sheep) To become accustomed to and attached to an area of mountain pasture, seldom straying from it.
heft
heft
noun
(Northern England) A piece of mountain pasture to which a farm animal has become hefted (accustomed).
(US, dated, colloquial) The greater part or bulk of anything.
(West of Ireland) Poor condition in sheep caused by mineral deficiency.
(figurative) Influence; importance.
(uncountable) Weight.
A number of sheets of paper fastened together, as for a notebook.
A part of a serial publication.
An animal that has become hefted thus.
Heaviness, the feel of weight; heftiness.
The act or effort of heaving; violent strain or exertion.
verb
(obsolete) past participle of heave
(transitive) To lift up; especially, to lift something heavy.
(transitive) To test the weight of something by lifting it.
(transitive, Northern England and Scotland) To make (a farm animal, especially a flock of sheep) accustomed and attached to an area of mountain pasture.
hfdf
hhfa
hifo
hoff
hoff
prep
Pronunciation spelling of off.
hoof
hoof
noun
(geometry, dated) An ungula.
(slang) The human foot.
The tip of a toe of an ungulate such as a horse, ox or deer, strengthened by a thick keratin covering.
verb
(colloquial) To walk.
(colloquial, football (soccer), transitive) To kick, especially to kick a football a long way downfield with little accuracy.
(informal) To dance, especially as a professional.
To trample with hooves.
howf
howf
noun
(obsolete, Scotland) public house, tavern
hsfs
huff
huff
noun
(draughts) The act of removing an opponent's piece as a forfeit for deliberately not taking a piece (often signalled by blowing on it).
(obsolete) One swelled with a false sense of importance or value; a boaster.
A heavy breath; a grunt or sigh.
An expression of anger, annoyance, disgust, etc.
verb
(intransitive) To bluster or swell with anger, arrogance, or pride; to storm; to take offense.
(intransitive) To breathe heavily.
(intransitive) To enlarge; to swell up.
(intransitive) To say in a huffy manner.
(transitive) To inhale psychoactive inhalants.
(transitive) To treat with arrogance and insolence; to chide or rebuke rudely; to bully, to hector.
(transitive, archaic) To vex; to offend.
(transitive, draughts) To remove an opponent's piece as a forfeit for deliberately not taking a piece (often signalled by blowing on it).
iihf
khaf
khaf
noun
The eleventh letter of the Hebrew and Aramaic alphabets, kaph, especially when pronounced as a fricative (rather than as a plosive).