(slang, often derogatory) A penis likened to a clitoris, especially in terms of smallness.
verb
(slang, vulgar, often with "off") To stimulate the clitoris.
clot
clot
noun
A silly person.
A solidified mass of any liquid.
A thrombus, solidified mass of blood.
verb
(intransitive) To form a clot or mass.
(transitive) To cause to clot or form into a mass.
cltp
clut
colt
colt
noun
(biblical) A young camel or donkey.
(cricket, slang) A professional cricketer during his first season.
(figuratively) A youthful or inexperienced person; a novice.
(nautical) A short piece of rope once used by petty officers as an instrument of punishment.
A young crane (bird).
A young male horse.
verb
(obsolete, transitive) To befool.
(obsolete, transitive) To horse; to get with young.
To frisk or frolic like a colt; to act licentiously or wantonly.
ctrl
ctrl
noun
Alternative form of ctrl. Abbreviation of control.
cult
cult
adj
(neologism, music) Alternative form of kvlt.
Enjoyed by a small, loyal group.
Of or relating to a cult.
noun
(chiefly derogatory) A group, sect or movement following an unorthodox religious or philosophical system of beliefs, especially one in which members remove and exclude themselves from greater society, including family members not part of the cult, and show extreme devotion to a charismatic leader.
(informal) A group of people having an obsession with or intense admiration for a particular activity, idea, person or thing.
The veneration, devotion, and religious rites given to a deity (especially in a historical polytheistic context), or (in a Christian context) to a saint.
lect
lect
noun
(linguistics, sociolinguistics) A specific form of a language or language cluster: a language or a dialect.
nctl
talc
talc
noun
(obsolete) A microscope slide made of a plate of mica, generally in use from the start of modern microscopy until the early nineteenth century, after which glass slides became the standard medium.
(obsolete) Originally a large range of transparent or glistening foliated minerals. Examples include mica, selenite and the hydrated magnesium silicate that the term talc generally has referred to in modern times (see below). Also an item made of such a mineral and depending for its function on the special nature of the mineral (see next). Mediaeval writers adopted the term from the Arabic.
A soft mineral, composed of hydrated magnesium silicate, that has a soapy feel and a greenish, whitish, or grayish color, and usually occurs in foliated masses.