(India) A workman who checks a railway track for faults, and who carries a keying hammer.
(dated) A telegraph operator.
An employee of vital importance to a business.
keymar
keymen
keymen
noun
plural of keyman
kymnel
kymnel
noun
Obsolete form of kimnel.
mackey
meekly
meekly
adv
In a meek manner; quietly and humbly.
metsky
mickey
mickey
noun
(Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, informal) The vagina.
(Australia, informal) A well-known honeyeater, the Noisy Miner, Manorina melanocephala, of eastern Australia.
(Cockney rhyming slang) piss, shortened and more commonly used form of Mickey Bliss.
(US, slang) A Mickey Finn; a beverage, usually alcoholic, that has been drugged.
(US, slang, dated, Depression Era) A potato.
(US, slang, obsolete) An Irish person.
(chiefly Canada, informal) A small bottle of liquor, holding 375 ml or 13 oz., typically shaped to fit in one's pocket.
(chiefly Ireland, informal) The penis.
(computing) The resolution of a mouse: the smallest measurable distance it can move the cursor, used as a unit of length.
(rural Australia, informal) A young bull, especially one that is unbranded and running wild.
verb
To secretly slip drugs into somebody's drink.
monkey
monkey
noun
(Britain, slang) Five hundred pounds sterling; (US, dated) five hundred dollars.
(blackjack) A face card.
(historical) A small trading vessel of the sixteenth century.
(informal) A mischievous person, often a child.
(informal) Any nonhuman simian primate, including apes.
(slang) A drug habit; an addiction; a compulsion.
(slang) A menial employee who does a repetitive job, as in code monkey, grease monkey, phone monkey, powder monkey.
(slang) A person or the role of the person on the sidecar platform of a motorcycle involved in sidecar racing.
(slang) A person with minimal intelligence and/or an unattractive appearance
(slang) A person's temper, said to be "up" when they are angry.
(slang, derogatory, ethnic slur, offensive) A black person.
(slang, nautical) The vessel in which a mess receives its full allowance of grog.
A dance move popular in the 1960s.
A fluid consisting of hydrochloric acid and zinc, used in the process of soldering.
Any member of the clade Simiiformes not also of the clade Hominoidea containing humans and apes, from which they are usually, but not universally, distinguished by smaller size, a tail, and cheek pouches.
The weight or hammer of a pile driver; a heavy mass of iron, which, being raised high, falls on the head of the pile, and drives it into the earth; the falling weight of a drop hammer used in forging.
verb
(intransitive, informal) To meddle; to mess (with).