BAUCHLE | • bauchle v. (Scotland) To misuse, to bungle. • bauchle v. (Scotland) To insult, to upbraid, to make a fool of someone. • bauchle n. (Scotland, chiefly in the plural) An old shoe. |
HATEFUL | • hateful adj. Evoking a feeling of hatred. • hateful adj. Dislikeable. • hateful adj. Full of hatred. |
HAULAGE | • haulage n. The act of hauling. • haulage n. The business of transporting goods. • haulage n. The charge levied for hauling or pulling a ship or boat. |
HAULERS | • haulers n. Plural of hauler. • HAULER n. one who hauls. |
HAULIER | • haulier n. A person or company engaged in the haulage of goods. • haulier n. (Mining) A miner who hauls coal from the coalface to the bottom of the shaft. • HAULIER n. a person or firm employed in transporting goods, esp. by road. |
HEADFUL | • headful n. An amount of information, emotion, etc. present in the mind. • headful adj. (Genetics) That fills the head of a phage. • HEADFUL n. the contents of a head; a great amount of knowledge. |
HELLUVA | • helluva adj. (Colloquial) (A) hell of a; extreme. • helluva adv. (Colloquial); (expletive) (A) hell of a; extremely or very. • HELLUVA adj. hell of a, also HELLOVA. |
HUMERAL | • humeral adj. Of, pertaining to, or near the humerus or shoulder. • humeral n. An oblong scarf worn round the priest’s shoulders at certain parts of the Mass and of Benediction. • HUMERAL n. a bone of the shoulder. |
LAUGHED | • laughed v. Simple past tense and past participle of laugh. • LAUGH v. to express mirth by explosive inarticulate sounds. |
LAUGHER | • laugher n. One who laughs. • laugher n. A game in which an opponent is defeated by a sizable margin; a blowout. • laugher n. A variety of the domestic pigeon. |
SHAULED | • SHAUL v. to become shallow, also SHOAL. |
UNHABLE | • unhable adj. Obsolete form of unable. • UNHABLE adj. (obsolete) unable. |
UNHEALS | • unheals v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of unheal. • UNHEAL v. (Spenser) to discover, disclose, also UNHELE. |
UNLEASH | • unleash v. (Transitive) To free from a leash, or as from a leash. • unleash v. (Figurative) To let go; to release. • unleash v. (Figurative) To precipitate; to bring about. |
UNSHALE | • unshale v. (Obsolete) To strip the shale ("shell") or husk from; to uncover. • UNSHALE v. to strip the shale, or husk, from, also UNSHELL. |
VIHUELA | • vihuela n. (Music) A guitar-like string instrument of 15th- and 16th-century Spain, usually with six courses or… • vihuela n. (Music) A guitar-like string instrument of 19th-century Mexico with five strings, typically played in mariachi bands. • VIHUELA n. (Spanish) an old Spanish musical instrument related to the guitar. |