Alternative form of facts (“used to express agreement”).
noun
(informal) Nonstandard form of facts.
(obsolete or UK dialectal) The hair of the head.
A fax machine or a document received and printed by one.
verb
To send a document via a fax machine.
fdx
fix
fix
noun
(US) fettlings (mixture used to line a furnace)
(informal) A single dose of an addictive drug administered to a drug user.
A determination of location.
A difficult situation; a quandary or dilemma; a predicament.
A prearrangement of the outcome of a supposedly competitive process, such as a sporting event, a game, an election, a trial, or a bid.
A repair or corrective action.
verb
(intransitive) To become firm, so as to resist volatilization; to cease to flow or be fluid; to congeal; to become hard and malleable, as a metallic substance.
(intransitive) To become fixed; to settle or remain permanently; to cease from wandering; to rest.
(transitive) To attach; to affix; to hold in place or at a particular time.
(transitive) To make (a contest, vote, or gamble) unfair; to privilege one contestant or a particular group of contestants, usually before the contest begins; to arrange immunity for defendants by tampering with the justice system via bribery or extortion.
(transitive) To mend, to repair.
(transitive) To render (a photographic impression) permanent by treating with such applications as will make it insensitive to the action of light.
(transitive, US, informal) To surgically render an animal, especially a pet, infertile.
(transitive, by extension) (Of a piercing look) to direct at someone.
(transitive, chemistry, biology) To convert into a stable or available form.
(transitive, chess) To prevent enemy pawns from advancing by directly opposing the most advanced one with one of one's own pawns so as to threaten to capture any advancing backward pawns.
(transitive, figuratively, usually in the passive) To focus or determine (oneself, on a concept); to fixate.
(transitive, informal) To prepare (food or drink).
(transitive, informal) To take revenge on, to best; to serve justice on an assumed miscreant.
(transitive, mathematics, semantics) To map a (point or subset) to itself.
(transitive, obsolete) To pierce; now generally replaced by transfix.
fox
fox
noun
(cartomancy) The fourteenth Lenormand card.
(mechanics) A wedge driven into the split end of a bolt to tighten it.
(military, aviation) Air-to-air weapon launched.
(nautical) A small strand of rope made by twisting several rope-yarns together. Used for seizings, mats, sennits, and gaskets.
(obsolete) A sword; so called from the stamp of a fox on the blade, or perhaps of a wolf taken for a fox.
(slang, figurative) A cunning person.
(slang, figurative) A person with reddish brown hair, usually a woman.
(slang, figurative) A physically attractive man or woman.
A fox terrier.
A hidden radio transmitter, finding which is the goal of radiosport.
A red fox, small carnivore (Vulpes vulpes), related to dogs and wolves, with red or silver fur and a bushy tail.
Any of numerous species of small wild canids resembling the red fox. In the taxonomy they form the tribe Vulpini within the family Canidae, consisting of nine genera (see the Wikipedia article on the fox).
The fur of a fox.
The gemmeous dragonet, a fish, Callionymus lyra, so called from its yellow color.
verb
(intransitive) To act slyly or craftily.
(intransitive) To discolour paper. Fox marks are spots on paper caused by humidity. (See foxing.)
(intransitive) To turn sour; said of beer, etc., when it sours in fermenting.
(transitive) To confuse or baffle (someone).
(transitive) To intoxicate; to stupefy with drink.
(transitive) To make sour, as beer, by causing it to ferment.
(transitive) To repair (boots) with new front upper leather, or to piece the upper fronts of.
(transitive) To trick, fool or outwit (someone) by cunning or ingenuity.