| ASSART | • assart n. Forest land cleared for agriculture. • assart n. (Law, obsolete) The act or offence of grubbing up trees and bushes, and thus destroying the thickets… • assart v. To clear forest land for agriculture; remove stumps. |
| ASTART | • astart v. (Transitive, obsolete) To cause to start; startle; start up; jump. • astart v. (Intransitive) To start up. • astart v. (Obsolete) To get away, escape; escape from. |
| BOGART | • bogart n. (Slang) An obnoxious, selfish and overbearing person; an attention hog. • bogart v. (Slang) To selfishly take or keep something; to hog; especially to hold a joint (marijuana) dangling… • bogart v. (Slang) To get something by bullying, intimidation; be a tough guy. |
| COMART | • comart n. (Obsolete) A covenant. • COMART n. (Shakespeare) an agreement. |
| DEPART | • depart v. (Intransitive) To leave. • depart v. (Intransitive) To set out on a journey. • depart v. (Intransitive, euphemistic) To die. |
| EMPART | • empart v. Archaic form of impart. • EMPART v. (Spenser) to impart. |
| ENDART | • endart v. (Obsolete, rare) To throw or shoot out like a dart. • ENDART v. (Shakespeare) to dart in, also INDART. |
| IMPART | • impart v. (Transitive) To give or bestow (e.g. a quality or property). • impart v. (Transitive) To give a part or to share. • impart v. (Transitive) To make known; to show (By speech, writing etc.). |
| INDART | • indart v. (Archaic, transitive) To pierce, as if with a dart. • INDART v. (Shakespeare) to dart in, also ENDART. |
| JUMART | • jumart n. The fabled offspring of a bull and a mare. • JUMART n. the supposed offspring of a bull and a mare. |
| NONART | • nonart n. That which is not art. • NONART n. something that is not art. |
| OXCART | • oxcart n. A cart designed to be drawn by an ox or oxen. • OXCART n. a cart drawn by an ox. |
| TEWART | • tewart n. Alternative form of tuart (“Australian tree”). • TEWART n. (Native Australian) a strong-timbered eucalyptus, also TOOART, TUART. |
| THWART | • thwart adj. Placed or situated across something else; cross, oblique, transverse. • thwart adj. (Figuratively, dated) Of people: having a tendency to oppose; obstinate, perverse, stubborn. • thwart adj. (Figuratively, dated) Of situations or things: adverse, unfavourable, unlucky. |
| TOOART | • tooart n. Alternative form of tuart (“Australian tree”). • TOOART n. (Native Australian) a strong-timbered eucalyptus, also TEWART, TUART. |
| UNCART | • uncart v. (Transitive) To remove or unload from a cart. • UNCART v. to take off a cart. |
| UPDART | • updart v. (Intransitive, poetic) To dart upward. • UPDART v. to dart up. |