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LOLLIPOP |
Sucker |
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LOUSE |
Blood-sucker |
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SUCKERED |
Of Sucker |
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SUCKERING |
Of Sucker |
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STRAW |
Warts retreated, sucker! |
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GOBSTOPPER |
Big all-day sucker |
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SUCKFISH |
A sucker fish. |
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CREEKFISH |
The chub sucker. |
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SPEARFISH |
The carp sucker. |
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CUPULE |
A sucker or acetabulum. |
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DUPE |
Sucker brought back pud to England |
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SURCLE |
A little shoot; a twig; a sucker. |
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SOBOLES |
A sucker, as of tree or shrub. |
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ACETABULUM |
The large posterior sucker of the leeches. |
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LEECH |
The French exposed Churchill’s humble origins ... sucker! |
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SCION |
A shoot or sprout of a plant; a sucker. |
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PATELLULA |
A cuplike sucker on the feet of certain insects. |
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EMBOLUS |
Something inserted, as a wedge; the piston or sucker of a
pump or syringe. |
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AMPHISTOMOUS |
Having a sucker at each extremity, as certain
entozoa, by means of which they adhere. |
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SUCKER |
To strip off the suckers or shoots from; to deprive of
suckers; as, to sucker maize. |
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TILLER |
A shoot of a plant, springing from the root or bottom of
the original stalk; a sucker. |
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SEA SNAIL |
A small fish of the genus Liparis, having a ventral
sucker. It lives among stones and seaweeds. |
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SANDNECKER |
A European flounder (Hippoglossoides limandoides); --
called also rough dab, long fluke, sand fluke, and sand sucker. |
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HYDRA |
Any small fresh-water hydroid of the genus Hydra, usually
found attached to sticks, stones, etc., by a basal sucker. |
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QUILLBACK |
An American fresh-water fish (Ictiobus, / Carpiodes,
cyprinus); -- called also carp sucker, sailfish, spearfish, and
skimback. |