thick+slice
41noisette — 1. noun a small round thick slice of meat (in particular, lamb or veal) that has been deboned 2. adjective flavoured with hazelnuts …
42dada — I Inglish (Indian English) Dictionary elder brother; Street boss (Mumbai slang) II Rasta Dictionary father III North Country (Newcastle) Words a blow, a thump...also a lump, a large piece, a thick slice, as of bread or cheese …
43soak — 01. You need to [soak] the dried mushrooms in water for a while before you can use them. 02. After the race, the runner [soaked] his sore feet in warm water. 03. We got [soaked] walking home in the rain. 04. I left the dishes to [soak] for a… …
44T-bone steak — [ ,ti boun steık ] noun count a thick slice of BEEF containing a bone shaped like the letter T …
45steak — mid 15c., thick slice of meat cut for roasting, probably from O.N. steik roast meat, cognate with steikja to roast on a spit, and ultimately something stuck (on a spit); related to STICK (Cf. stick) (v.) …
46wang — penis, 1933, slang, probably from whangdoodle, an earlier term for gadget, thing for which the correct name is not known. Many such words (thingy, dingus, etc.) have been used in slang for penis, not because the actual name was unknown, but… …
47wad — I. n a. a bundle of banknotes, a large quantity of money. Wad had been used in this sense all over the English speaking world since the end of the 19th century. In Brit ain the word was heard principally in working class speech before being… …
48doorstep — n. stair leading from the ground level to a door; (British Slang) thick slice of bread v. sell door to door; (British Slang) wait outside the home of a person for an interview or to take a photograph (usually journalists) …
49doorstepped — n. stair leading from the ground level to a door; (British Slang) thick slice of bread v. sell door to door; (British Slang) wait outside the home of a person for an interview or to take a photograph (usually journalists) …
50doorstepping — n. stair leading from the ground level to a door; (British Slang) thick slice of bread v. sell door to door; (British Slang) wait outside the home of a person for an interview or to take a photograph (usually journalists) …