| CHUMSHIP | • chumship n. (Uncountable) The condition of being chums; friendship. • chumship n. (Social sciences) preadolescent friendship between two people of the same sex. • CHUMSHIP n. friendship. |
| CLUMPISH | • clumpish adj. Tending to form clumps. • clumpish adj. Heavy and awkward; clumpy. • CLUMPISH adj. resembling a thick mass. |
| EUPHUISM | • euphuism n. (Uncountable) An ornate style of writing (in Elizabethan England) marked by the excessive use of alliteration… • euphuism n. An instance of euphuism. • EUPHUISM n. an affected literary style. |
| FRUMPISH | • frumpish adj. Poorly dressed; wearing drab, lifeless, ill-fitting clothing, or being clothing of this kind. • frumpish adj. (Dated) Bad-tempered. • FRUMPISH adj. somewhat like a frump. |
| GLUMPISH | • glumpish adj. (Dialect, dated) grumpy; sullen; gloomy. • GLUMPISH adj. glum. |
| GRUMPISH | • grumpish adj. Surly; sullen; gruff; grumpy. • GRUMPISH adj. grumpy. |
| HUMPIEST | • humpiest adj. Superlative form of humpy: most humpy. • HUMPY adj. full of humps. |
| HUMPTIES | • HUMPTY n. a low padded seat. |
| LUMPFISH | • lumpfish n. Lumpsucker. • LUMPFISH n. a kind of marine fish, covered with lumps, also LUMPSUCKER. |
| MURPHIES | • murphies n. Plural of murphy. • MURPHY n. (colloquial) a potato. |
| PLUMPISH | • plumpish adj. Somewhat plump. • plumpish adv. (Informal) In a blunt and direct fashion. • PLUMPISH adj. somewhat plump. |
| PYTHIUMS | • PYTHIUM n. a fungus of the genus Pythium. |
| SILPHIUM | • silphium n. (Historical) A plant, thought to be extinct, used in Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome in cooking and… • Silphium prop.n. A taxonomic genus within the family Asteraceae – rosinweed. • SILPHIUM n. (Latin) a plant imported by the Greeks from Cyrenaica and used as a foodstuff and in medicine. |
| SUMPHISH | • sumphish adj. (Scotland, Northern England) stupid; blockheaded. • SUMPHISH adj. (Scots) stupid, doltish. |
| TRIUMPHS | • triumphs n. Plural of triumph. • triumphs v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of triumph. • TRIUMPH v. to be victorious. |
| TUMPHIES | • TUMPHY n. (Scots) a blockhead. |