<span class="searchmatch">chichi</span> <span class="searchmatch">man</span> (plural <span class="searchmatch">chichi</span> men) Alternative spelling of chi chi <span class="searchmatch">man</span>....
<span class="searchmatch">chichi</span> men plural of <span class="searchmatch">chichi</span> <span class="searchmatch">man</span>...
<span class="searchmatch">chichi</span> <span class="searchmatch">man</span> chi chi <span class="searchmatch">man</span> (plural chi chi men) (Caribbean, Jamaica, slang, derogatory) A homosexual <span class="searchmatch">man</span>. See Thesaurus:male homosexual...
achichi old <span class="searchmatch">man</span> achachi atl (“water”) + <span class="searchmatch">chichi</span> (“dog”) achichi otter atl (“water”) + <span class="searchmatch">chichi</span> (“dog”) Calque of Spanish perro de agua. achichi otter Brockway...
– 7th centuries BCE, translated based on James Legge's version Méng zhī <span class="searchmatch">chīchī</span>, bào bù mào sī. [Pinyin] A simple-looking lad you were, Carrying cloth to...
(ほん)紀(き)私(し)記(き)云(いう)加(カ)曾(ソ) <span class="searchmatch">chichi</span> sukō, wamei <span class="searchmatch">chichi</span>, Nihon Ki Shiki iu kaso Father: considered in Japanese as <span class="searchmatch">chichi</span>; in the Nihon Shoki Shiki it is...
father) 父 (ちち, <span class="searchmatch">chichi</span>), (more general and impersonal) 父親 (ちちおや, chichioya), (more formal) 父上 (ちちうえ, chichiue), (more informal, similar to old <span class="searchmatch">man</span>) 親父 (おやじ,...
“parent”) + 父 (<span class="searchmatch">chichi</span>, “father”). The reading appears to be an alteration of an earlier form, oyachichi, perhaps under the influence of 爺 (<span class="searchmatch">chichi</span>, jiji, jī...
IPA(key): /ˈki.ka/, [ˈki.ka], [ˈt͡ʃi-] Hyphenation: chì‧ca chica f (plural <span class="searchmatch">chichi</span>) (literally and figuratively, obsolete or literary) fold, crease, wrinkle...
on: Father Time Wikipedia Father Time A personification of time as an old <span class="searchmatch">man</span>, usually carrying an hourglass. c. 1594 (date written), William Shakespeare...