Wikipedia has an article on: <span class="searchmatch">dock</span> <span class="searchmatch">pudding</span> Wikipedia <span class="searchmatch">dock</span> <span class="searchmatch">pudding</span> (countable and uncountable, plural <span class="searchmatch">dock</span> <span class="searchmatch">puddings</span>) A <span class="searchmatch">pudding</span> from the north of England,...
<span class="searchmatch">dock</span> <span class="searchmatch">puddings</span> plural of <span class="searchmatch">dock</span> <span class="searchmatch">pudding</span>...
cabinet <span class="searchmatch">pudding</span> castle <span class="searchmatch">pudding</span> chancellor's <span class="searchmatch">pudding</span> Christmas <span class="searchmatch">pudding</span> corn <span class="searchmatch">pudding</span> cottage <span class="searchmatch">pudding</span> diplomat <span class="searchmatch">pudding</span> <span class="searchmatch">dock</span> <span class="searchmatch">pudding</span> Europudding Eve's <span class="searchmatch">pudding</span> figgy...
like <span class="searchmatch">docks</span> […] A burdock plant, or the leaves of that plant. bloody <span class="searchmatch">dock</span> butterdock candock curled <span class="searchmatch">dock</span> <span class="searchmatch">dock</span> leaf docklike <span class="searchmatch">dock</span> <span class="searchmatch">pudding</span> patience <span class="searchmatch">dock</span> prairie...
see; saw. I seen it with my own eyes. 1918, Norman Lindsay, The Magic <span class="searchmatch">Pudding</span>, Sydney: Angus and Robertson, page 156: "Tut, tut, Sir Benjimen," said...
The Magic <span class="searchmatch">Pudding</span>, page 148: A Judge must be respected, / A Judge you mustn't knock / Or else you'll be detected / And shoved into the <span class="searchmatch">dock</span>. 1952, Ralph...
turn of a shoulder she indicated the water front, where, at the end of the <span class="searchmatch">dock</span> on which they stood, lay the good ship, Mount Vernon, river packet, the black...
Proto-West Germanic *dokkā (“round mass, ball, muscle, doll”), whence English <span class="searchmatch">dock</span> (“stumpy tail”). In 14th-century England, hound (from Old English hund) was...
bed red-up, red up red valerian red-veined red-veined darter red-veined <span class="searchmatch">dock</span> red velvet red velvet cake, red-velvet cake red velvet mite red vet pet Red...
(“Estonians”). -e Marks the nominative singular of feminine n-stem nouns docce (“<span class="searchmatch">dock</span>”) berġe (“berry”) Forms feminine agent nouns, often as a counterpart to masculine...