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4274 entries found
pucker (n.)
1726, literal; 1741, figurative; from
pucker
(v.).
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pucker (v.)
1590s, "prob. earlier in colloquial use" [OED], possibly a frequentative form of
pock
, dialectal variant of
poke
"bag, sack" (see
poke
(n.1)), which would give it the same notion as in
purse
(v.). "Verbs of this type often shorten or obscure the original vowel; compare
clutter
,
flutter
,
putter
, etc." [Barnhart]. Related:
Puckered
;
puckering
.
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puckish (adj.)
1867, from
Puck
+
-ish
. Related:
Puckishly
;
puckishness
.
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puckster (n.)
headlinese for "ice hockey player," 1939, from
puck
(n.) +
-ster
.
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pud (n.)
slang for "penis," 1939 (in James Joyce), according to OED and DAS from
pudding
in the same slang sense (1719); from the original "sausage" sense of
pudding
(q.v.).
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pudding (n.)
c. 1300, "a kind of sausage: the stomach or one of the entrails of a pig, sheep, etc., stuffed with minced meat, suet, seasoning, boiled and kept till needed," perhaps from a West Germanic stem
*pud-
"to swell" (source also of Old English
puduc
"a wen," Westphalian dialect
puddek
"lump, pudding," Low German
pudde-wurst
"black pudding," English dialectal
pod
"belly;" also see
pudgy
).
Other possibility is the traditional one that it is from Old French
boudin
"sausage," from Vulgar Latin
*botellinus
, from Latin
botellus
"sausage" (change of French
b-
to English
p-
presents difficulties, but compare
purse
(n.)). The modern sense had emerged by 1670, from extension to other foods boiled or steamed in a bag or sack (16c.). German
pudding
, French
pouding
, Swedish
pudding
, Irish
putog
are from English.
Pudding-pie
attested from 1590s.
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puddinghead (n.)
"amiable stupid person," 1851, from
pudding
+
head
(n.).
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puddle (n.)
early 14c., "small pool of dirty water," frequentative or diminutive of Old English
pudd
"ditch," related to German
pudeln
"to splash in water" (compare
poodle
). Originally used of pools and ponds as well.
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puddle (v.)
"to dabble in water, poke in mud," mid-15c., from
puddle
(n.); extended sense in iron manufacture is "turn and stir (molten iron) in a furnace." Related:
Puddled
;
puddling
.
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pudendum (n.)
"external genitals," late 14c. (
pudenda
), from Latin
pudendum
(plural
pudenda
), literally "thing to be ashamed of," neuter gerundive of
pudere
"make ashamed; be ashamed," from PIE root
*(s)peud-
"to punish, repulse." Translated into Old English as
scamlim
("shame-limb"); in Middle English also Englished as
pudende
(early 15c.). Related:
Pudendal
.
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