|
BEHINDS |
Bottoms |
|
FLARES |
Bell-bottoms |
|
KEELS |
Ship bottoms |
|
HEELS |
Ship bottoms |
|
|
|
G-STRINGS |
Bikini bottoms |
|
LOBES |
Ear bottoms |
|
GSTRINGS |
Bikini bottoms |
|
G STRINGS |
Skimpy bikini bottoms |
|
|
|
BACKSIDES |
Support edges and bottoms |
|
HEMS |
Skirt or trouser bottoms |
|
IMAGED |
Pictured wizard wearing khaki cropped bottoms |
|
TIN |
First person wearing tight, nylon bottoms and metal? |
|
CADENCE |
Rhythm of dance going wild ... frolic, shake bottoms! |
|
NAPPIES |
When Tinkerbell’s friend returns pies, they keep little bottoms dry |
|
HYENA |
He’s known to laugh with his top and bottoms off... Yea? Nay? |
|
BROAD |
A lathe tool for turning down the insides and bottoms of
cylinders. |
|
WEBBING |
A woven band of cotton or flax, used for reins, girths,
bed bottoms, etc. |
|
COPPERWORM |
The teredo; -- so called because it injures the bottoms
of vessels, where not protected by copper. |
|
BRAIL |
Ropes passing through pulleys, and used to haul in or up the
leeches, bottoms, or corners of sails, preparatory to furling. |
|
TABLE |
To make board hems in the skirts and bottoms of (sails)
in order to strengthen them in the part attached to the boltrope. |
|
COUNTERFLORY |
Adorned with flowers (usually fleurs-de-lis) so
divided that the tops appear on one side and the bottoms on the others;
-- said of any ordinary. |
|
LEPAS |
Any one of various species of Lepas, a genus of pedunculated
barnacles found attached to floating timber, bottoms of ships, Gulf
weed, etc.; -- called also goose barnacle. See Barnacle. |
|
TEREDO |
...ks which
bore into submerged wood, such as the piles of wharves, bottoms of
ships, etc.; -- called also shipworm. See Shipworm. See Illust. in A... |