whoreson

  • 21Fixed verse — forms are a kind of template or formula that poetry can be composed in. The converse of fixed verse is Free Verse poetry, which by design has little or no pre established guidelines.The various poetic forms, such as meter, rhyme scheme, and… …

    Wikipedia

  • 22Alraune (Kulturgeschichte) — Gemeine Alraune (Mandragora officinarum) Die Gemeine Alraune (Mandragora officinarum) aus der Gattung Mandragora, ist eine giftige Heil und Ritualpflanze, die seit der Antike als Zaubermittel gilt, vor allem wegen ihrer besonderen Wurzelform, die …

    Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 23Alraunenmännlein — Gemeine Alraune (Mandragora officinarum) Die gemeine Alraune aus der Gattung Mandragora, ist eine giftige Heil und Ritualpflanze, die seit der Antike als Zaubermittel gilt, vor allem wegen ihrer besonderen Wurzelform, die der menschlichen Gestalt …

    Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 24choda — noun a) A whoreson, bastard, son of a bitch. b) The penis. Syn: choad, chode, dick …

    Wiktionary

  • 25bastard — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. illegitimate [child], love child; sham, counterfeit, fraud. adj. illegitimate, natural, misgotten; false, spurious; mongrel, hybrid. See impurity, deception, posterity. II (Roget s IV) modif. 1. [Born …

    English dictionary for students

  • 26posterity — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) Future generations Nouns 1. posterity, progeny, issue, fruit, seed, offspring, young, flesh and blood; brood, litter, farrow, spawn, spat, clutch, seed, product; [extended, institutional, or nuclear]… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 27love child — (Roget s 3 Superthesaurus) n. bastard, illegitimate child, whoreson …

    English dictionary for students

  • 28loggerhead — [16] Loggerhead originally meant much the same as blockhead – a stupid person with a block of wood for a head (in Shakespeare’s Love’s Labour’s Lost (1588), Berowne calls Costard a ‘whoreson loggerhead’). The first part of it probably represents… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 29Z — not a native letter in Old English; in Anglo French words it represents the ts sound (Cf. Anglo Fr. fiz, from L. filius, modern FITZ (Cf. Fitz)); from late 13c. it began to be used for the voiced s sound and had fully taken that role by 1400. For …

    Etymology dictionary

  • 30bastard — 1. noun 1) archaic he had fathered a bastard Syn: illegitimate child, child born out of wedlock; dated love child, by blow; natural child/son/daughter 2) informal he s a real bastard Syn: scoundrel, villain, rogue, rascal, wease …

    Thesaurus of popular words