A species of seabream native to the eastern Atlantic, Boops boops.
verb
(nautical) To fall off from the wind; to edge away to leeward.
bouge
bouge
noun
(now historical) The right to rations at court, granted to the king's household, attendants etc.
verb
To bilge.
To swell out.
cogue
cogue
noun
(chiefly Scotland) A small round wooden vessel for holding milk.
dogue
erugo
gouge
gouge
noun
(US, military, slang, uncountable) Information.
(mining) Soft material lying between the wall of a vein and the solid vein of ore.
(originally US, colloquial) An act of gouging.
(slang) A cheat, a fraud; an imposition.
(slang) An impostor.
A bookbinder's tool with a curved face, used for blind tooling or gilding.
A chisel with a curved blade for cutting or scooping channels, grooves, or holes in wood, stone, etc.
A cut or groove, as left by a gouge or something sharp.
An incising tool that cuts blanks or forms for envelopes, gloves, etc., from leather, paper, or other materials.
verb
(intransitive) To use a gouge.
(transitive) To cheat or impose upon; in particular, to charge an unfairly or unreasonably high price.
(transitive) To make a groove, hole, or mark in by scooping with or as if with a gouge.
(transitive, intransitive) To dig or scoop (something) out with or as if with a gouge; in particular, to use a thumb to push or try to push the eye (of a person) out of its socket.
hogue
orgue
orgue
noun
(military) A piece of ordnance, consisting of a number of musket barrels arranged so that a match or train may connect with all their touchholes, and a discharge be secured almost or quite simultaneously.
(military) Any of a number of long, thick pieces of timber, pointed and shod with iron, and suspended, each by a separate rope, over a gateway, to be let down in case of attack.
pogue
pogue
noun
(Ireland) A kiss.
(US, military slang) Alternative form of POG (“non-infantry member of the military”)
(US, slang) A young, male, passive homosexual.
(dated, slang) A purse; hence, money.
rogue
rogue
adj
(by extension) Deceitful, unprincipled.
(by extension) Large, destructive and unpredictable.
(of an animal, especially an elephant) Vicious and solitary.
Mischievous, unpredictable.
noun
(computing) Deceitful software pretending to be anti-spyware, but in fact being malicious software itself.
(role-playing games) A character class focusing on stealthy conduct.
A mischievous scamp.
A plant that shows some undesirable variation.
A scoundrel, rascal or unprincipled, deceitful, and unreliable person.
A vagrant.
An aggressive animal separate from the herd, especially an elephant.
verb
(horticulture) To cull; to destroy plants not meeting a required standard, especially when saving seed, rogue or unwanted plants are removed before pollination.
(intransitive, obsolete) To wander; to play the vagabond; to play knavish tricks.
(obsolete) To give the name or designation of rogue to; to decry.
(transitive, dated) To cheat.
rouge
rouge
adj
Of a reddish pink colour.
noun
(Canadian football) A single point awarded when a team kicks the ball out of its opponent's end zone, or when a kicked ball becomes dead within the non-kicking team's end zone. Etymology uncertain; it is thought that in the early years of the sport, a red flag indicated that a single had been scored.
(chemistry, archaic) A red amorphous powder consisting of ferric oxide, used in polishing and as a cosmetic; crocus; jeweller's rouge.
(obsolete) From 1862 to 1868, a similar scoring move in Sheffield rules football. From 1862 to 1867, accomplished by touching the ball down after it had been kicked between two "rouge flags" either side of the goal. From 1867-1868, awarded for kicking the ball between the rouge flags and under the crossbar.
(obsolete) In the Eton wall game, a scrummage, melée.
Any reddish pink colour.
In the Eton College field game, a scoring move accomplished by touching the ball down behind the opponents' goal-line (somewhat similar to the try in rugby). Originally, the player who scored the rouge had a chance to kick a goal, and the rouge was used as a tie-breaker if an equal number of goals was scored by each side. In the contemporary Eton College field game, a five-point score is awarded for kicking the ball so that it deflects off one of the opposing players and goes beyond the opposition's end of the pitch, and then touching the ball.
Red or pink makeup to add colour to the cheeks; blusher.
verb
(transitive, intransitive) To apply rouge (makeup).
segou
togue
togue
noun
Lake trout, Salvelinus namaycush, a freshwater char of northern North America.
vogue
vogue
noun
(Polari) A cigarette.
(dance) A highly stylized modern dance that evolved out of the Harlem ballroom scene in the 1960s.