(phytopathology) A disease of plants caused by fungus; rust.
fooyung
foregut
foregut
noun
(biology, anatomy, embryology) The anterior part of the alimentary canal of an embryo, from the mouth to the duodenum, in humans and some other animals.
(biology, anatomy, medicine) The developed counterpart in the adult: the proximal part of the alimentary canal, which in humans runs from the mouth to the first half of the duodenum, up to the ampulla of Vater.
forsung
fougade
fougade
noun
(military, historical) A kind of land mine; a fougasse.
fougere
foughty
foulage
foulage
noun
A form of massage involving kneading and pressure against the muscles.
fouling
fouling
noun
The adhesion of a foreign material onto a surface, especially so as to reduce its functionality.
verb
present participle of foul
fourgon
fourgon
noun
(geometry) A polygon with four sides; a quadrilateral.
(rail transport) A French baggage wagon.
An ammunition wagon.
fourrag
foxburg
froughy
froughy
adj
(UK, dialect, archaic) Loose, spongy, or easily broken.
fugatos
fugatos
noun
plural of fugato
fulgora
fulgora
Proper noun
The Roman goddess/personification of lightning. She is the Roman counterpart of Astrape.
fulgour
fulgour
noun
Obsolete form of fulgor.
fungoes
fungoes
noun
plural of fungo
fungoid
fungoid
adj
Of, pertaining to, or resembling a fungus.
noun
A fungus, or some other organism closely resembling a fungus.
fungose
fungous
fungous
adj
(now rare, pathology) Of or containing a spongy, abnormal excrescence.
Of or pertaining to fungi; fungal.
furlong
furlong
noun
(Britain, dialectal) An undefined portion of an unenclosed field.
(historical) Synonym of stadion (“a Greek unit of distance based on standardized footraces, equivalent to about 185.4 metres”)
A unit of distance equal to one-eighth of a mile (220 yards, or 201.168 metres), now mainly used in measuring distances in farmland and horse racing.
A unit of land area one furlong (sense 1) square (ten acres, or about four hectares).
Synonym of headland (“unploughed boundary of a field”)
Synonym of land (“the ground left unploughed between furrows; any of several portions into which a field is divided for ploughing”)