• NASAL
n. 1888 pugilists’ sl. – the nose
• NASAL CROONER’S BROADCASTING STATION
n. Bk1942 Amer. sl. – a bedroom
• NASCENCE
n. 1570 rare – birth
• NASCENCY
n. 1682 – the process or fact of being born or brought into existence; birth
• NASCENT
adj. 1. a1624 – in the act of being born or brought forth
adj. 2. 1741 – coming into existence; just beginning to be; commencing to form, grow, develop, etc.
• NASE
adj. 1. 1536 sl. – drunken
adj. 2. a1550 cant obs. – of liquor: intoxicating
adv. c1315 obs. rare – not, by no means
n. 1. a1000 obs. – the nose
n. 2. 1774 – a promontory or headland, a ness
• NASEBY-CHILD
n. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – an aged person
• NASEE
adj. c1330 obs. rare – having a mutilated nose
• NASE NAB
n. 1. 17C sl. – a red nose
n. 2. 17C UK criminals’ sl. – a drunkard; drunkenness
• NASH
adj. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – firm, stiff, hard
n. 1. 1791 Sc. – impudent or caustic talk, biting remarks
n. 2. 1942 Sc. – a chatterbox
n. 3. 1950s W. Indies Rasta usage – the female genitals
vb. 1. 1819 sl. – to go away from, or quit, any place or company
vb. 2. 1825 Sc. – to talk in a pert, impudent, or caustic manner
vb. 3. 19C sl. – to leave, to rush off
vb. 4. 1930s sl. – to eat, esp. to snack; to eat between meals
vb. 5. 1970s sl. – to practise oral sex
• NASHED
adj. 19C sl. – said of a person who is gone
• NASH-GAB
n. 1. 1816 Sc. & N. Eng. dial. – impertinent chatter, insolent talk
n. 2. 1818 Sc. & N. Eng. dial. – a pert or gossiping person, an impertinent, ill-natured fellow, a forward, prattling girl
• NASH-GABBIT
adj. 1873 Sc. – talkative, gossiping
• NASH-GOB
n. 1. 1816 Sc. & N. Eng. dial. – impertinent chatter; insolent talk
n. 2. 1816 Sc. & N. Eng. dial. – a pert or gossiping person
n. 3. 1846 Eng. dial. – an impertinent, ill-natured fellow
• NASHIE
adj. 1880 Sc. – talkative, chattering
• NASHIN
adj. 1825 Sc. – chattering, pert
n. 1. 1923 Sc. – impudent or caustic talk
n. 2. 1923 Sc. – a loquacious or cheeky person
• NASHO
n. 1. 1962 Aust. sl. – compulsory military training
n. 2. 1962 Aust. sl. – a conscript
• NASHVILLE
n. 1970s African-American sl. – any unsophisticated, suburban, middle-American town or person
• NASHY
adj. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – brittle, easily broken
• NASICORNOUS
adj. 1646 obs. rare – having a horn on the nose
• NASILLATE
vb. 1863 rare – to speak through the nose
• NASILLATION
n. 1859 rare – a nasal utterance
• NA SIRS!
int. Bk1903 – an exclamation of surprise
• NASK
n. 1686 cant – a prison
vb. 1920 Sc. – to steal, to pilfer unobtrusively
• NASKIN
n. 1686 cant – a prison
• NASKY
adj. 1611 obs. rare – nasty
• NASSAU
n. 1987 Amer. dial. – a person of mixed Black and Indian ancestry
• NASSAU NIGGER
n. 1942 Amer. dial. – a Black person from the Bahamas and Jamaica who speaks with a British accent
• NAST
n. 1. 1789 Eng. dial. – dirt, filth, foulness
n. 2. 1790 Eng. dial. – obscenity
n. 3. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – phlegm
• NASTEN
vb. 1873 Eng. dial. – to soil, to befoul; to render nasty
• NASTER
vb. 1899 Eng. dial. – to soil, to befoul; to render nasty
• NASTIC
adj. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – asthmatic, short-winded
• NASTIED UP
adj. 1966 Amer. dial. – dirty
• NASTIES
n. 1. 1900s African-American sl. – sexual desire
n. 2. 1930s US sl. – any unpleasant, disgusting, threatening or scary things or persons
n. 3. 1930s sl. – the Nazis
n. 4. 1980s drug culture sl. – drugs of any variety
• NASTIFIED
adj. 1. 1810 Sc. – nasty, disgusting
adj. 2. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – dishonourable, tricky, ungentlemanly
• NASTIFY
vb. 1873 nonce word – to make nasty
• NASTINESS
n. 1950s W. Indies euphemism – homosexuality or bestiality
• NASTMENT
n. 1887 Eng. dial. – filth, nastiness
• NASTRY
n. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – filth
• NASTY
adj. 1. E17 – oriented toward sex or sex and excrement; smutty
adj. 2. 1834 Amer. sl. – wickedly good, excellent, first-class, esp. in the respect of attractiveness or effectiveness; gorgeous, sexually attractive
adj. 3. 1874 colloq. – ill-tempered; disagreeable
adj. 4. 1930s African-American sl. – in jazz: good, good-terrible
adj. 5. 1991 Amer. sl. – sexy
adj. 6. 20C sl. – formidable
adv. 1966 Amer. dial. – extremely
n. 1. 1934 Amer. sl. – sexual intercourse
n. 2. 1968 Amer. sl. – an unpleasant or dangerous person or thing; a villain; a hateful, offensive person; a nasty person
vb. 1. 1728 obs. exc. Eng. dial. – to soil or make dirty or nasty
vb. 2. 1749 obs. exc. Eng. dial. – to commit a nuisance
vb. 3. 1863 Amer. dial. – to defecate
• THE NASTY
n. 1967 Amer. sl. – sexual intercourse
• NASTY AS A DEVIL UNKNOBBED
adj. 1892 Eng. dial. – dangerously spiteful
• NASTY-ASS
adj. 1. 1960s US sl. – of a person: unpleasant
adj. 2. 1960s US sl. – of a place: dirty, disgusting
• NASTY-BEHIND
adj. 1960s African-American sl. – of a woman: promiscuous
• NASTY BIT OF GOODS
n. 1910s sl. – an unpleasant person
• NASTY BIT OF WORK
n. 1910s sl. – an unpleasant person
• NASTY-CLEAN
adj. 1943 Amer. dial. – overly tidy; excessively fastidious
• NASTYGRAM
n. 1966-67 US sl., chiefly military usage – a written reprimand or record of misconduct; hence, an unpleasant written notice; an unpleasant note or letter or a communication that brings bad news
• NASTY JAR
n. Bk1902 sl. – a stinging retort
• NASTY KNOCK
n. 1886 sl. – a disagreeable experience
• NASTY-NASTY
n. 1993 US sl. – sex
• NASTY-NEAT
adj. 1916 Amer. dial. – very neat, overly tidy; excessively fastidious; too particular or fussy; old-fashioned
• NASTY-NICE
adj. 1873 Eng. & Amer. dial. – very neat, overly tidy; excessively fastidious; too particular or fussy; old-fashioned
• NASTY OFF
adj. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – in a bad plight; awkwardly situated
• NASTY ONE
n. 19C sl. – a disagreeable experience
• NASTY ONE IN THE EYE
n. Bk1902 sl. – a telling blow
• NASTY-PASTY
adj. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – disagreeable
• NASTY PIECE OF WORK
n. 1910s sl. – an unpleasant or objectionable person
• NASTY SLING
n. Bk1942 Amer. sl. – a fast throw
• NASTY UP
vb. 1965 Barbados sl. – to ruin or spoil
• NASUTE
adj. 1. 1653 obs. – keen-scented, sagacious
adj. 2. 1699 obs. rare – having a strong sense of smell
• NASUTENESS
n. 1660 obs. – sagacity
• NAT
n. 1. 1361-2 obs. exc. N. Eng. dial. – a mat; a straw mattress
n. 2. 1866 Sc. & N. Ireland – a person of short stature, esp. one of short temper
n. 3. 1893 Eng. dial. – a light, quick knocking
n. 4. 1961 UK rhyming sl. for ‘dole’ (Nat King Cole) – unemployment benefit
n. 5. 1992 UK rhyming sl. (Nat King Cole) – a bread roll
n. 6. 1992 UK rhyming sl. (Nat King Cole) – a mole (skin)
• NATABILITY
n. 1796 – capacity of floating
• NATAL
adj. 1. c1374 obs. – presiding over birthdays or nativities
adj. 2. 1870 – pert. to the nates or buttocks
n. 1484 obs. – a birthday-feast
• NATAL HOUR
n. 1704 – the hour or day of one’s birth; birthday
• NATALITIAL
adj. 1611 obs. – belonging to or connected with one’s birth or birthday
n. 1652 obs. – a birthday celebration
• NATALITIOUS
adj. 1. 1646 obs. – belonging to or connected with one’s birth or birthday
adj. 2. 1654 obs. rare – concerned with one’s children
• NATANT
adj. 1753 – swimming, floating
• NATATILE
adj. 1721 obs. rare – able to swim
• NATATION
n. 1623 – the act or art of swimming
• NATATIONAL
adj. 1883 – relating to swimming
• NATATIONIST
n. 1891 – a swimmer
• NATATORIAL
adj. 1816 – belonging to swimming
• NATATORY
adj. 1. 1836 – belonging to swimming
adj. 2. 1887 – characterized by swimming
n. c1400 obs. – a swimming-bath, a pool
• NATCH
adj. 1950s African-American sl. – free from the use of any artificial stimulants or narcotics
adv. 1940s African-American sl. – naturally
int. 1945 Amer. sl. – naturally! of course!
vb. 1767 Sc. – to seize, to lay hold of; to arrest
• NATCHIE
n. 1960s African-American sl. – an untrimmed, natural Black hairstyle
• NATCH TRIPS
n. 1960s African-American sl. – ‘highs’ induced by smoking the skins of or drinking the broth from banana, nutmeg, mace, cinnamons, peanut shells, peppers, or wild rice
• NATE
adj. 1. 1899 Ireland – first-rate, excellent
adj. 2. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – prepared; intended
vb. 1677 Sc. & Eng. dial. obs. – to use, to employ
• NATED
adj. 1628 obs. rare – born, bred, brought forth
• NATERFUL
adj. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – good-natured
• NATERLY
adv. 1884 Eng. dial. – naturally
• NATES
n. 1706 – the buttocks, haunches
• NATHELESS
adv. c900 – nevertheless, notwithstanding
• NATHELY
adv. 1873 Eng. dial. – nearly
• NATHEMO
adv. c1127 obs. – never the more
• NATHEMORE
adv. c1127 obs. – never the more
• NATHER
conj. c893 obs. – neither
• NATHLESS
adv. c900 – nevertheless, notwithstanding
prep. 1567 rare – in spite of, notwithstanding
• NATICIDE
n. 1855 rare – one who kills his or her child
• NATIFORM
adj. 1681 – resembling or having the form of buttocks
• NATION
adj. 1765 Eng. & Amer. dial. – very large, very great; impressive
adv. 1785 Eng. & Amer. – very, extremely
n. 1. c1386 obs. rare – a family, kindred
n. 2. 1523 obs. – the native population of a town or city
n. 3. 1762 – a great deal; a large number or amount; hence, an impressive example
n. 4. 1763 – a tribe of North American Indians
• NATIONAL
n. 1653 obs. – a representative of a nation
• NATIONALIST
n. 1817 rare – one belonging to a particular nation
• NATIONISH
adv. 1854 Eng. dial. – extremely
• NATIONIST
n. 1670 obs. rare – a representative of a nation
• NATIONLY
adv. 1897 Eng. dial. – very, extremely
• NATION OF A TIME
n. 1952 Amer. dial. – a very good time
• NATION-SEIZED
adj. 1842 Eng. dial. – extremely bad; most unpleasant
• A NATION SIGHT
n. 1809 Amer. dial. – a large amount or number
• NATITIAL
n. 1612 obs. rare – nativity, birth
• NATIVE
adj. 1432-50 obs. – born in a state of villeinage
n. 1. c1450 now Hist. – one born in bondage
n. 2. 1604 obs. exc. Eng. dial. – a native place or country
n. 3. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – native speech
n. 4. 1980 US sl. – to the employee of a circus or carnival: a local patron
n. 5. 2000 US – a native American Indian
• NATIVE BEEF
n. 1979 Amer. dial. – moose, deer, when harvested out of season
• NATIVE DAY
n. 1546 obs. – natal day, birthday
• NATIVELY
adv. a1564 obs. – naturally, without disguise, plainly, straightforwardly
• NATIVE NOTES
n. 1658 obs. rare – birthmarks
• NATIVES
n. 1589 obs. – fellow-countrymen, compatriots
• NATIVE SON
n. 1. 1910 Amer. sl. – a White man who is a native of California
n. 2. Bk1913-17 Amer. dial. – a native Oregonian
n. 3. 1918 Amer. Army sl. – a prune
• NATIVE SPORT
n. 1991 US sl. – during the Vietnam war: looking for and killing Viet Cong
• NATKIN
n. 1825 Sc. – the taint which meat acquires from being kept too long; any close, strong, disagreeable odour
• NAT KING COLE
n. 1. 1961 UK rhyming sl. for ‘dole’ – unemployment benefit
n. 2. 1992 UK rhyming sl. – a bread roll
n. 3. 1992 UK rhyming sl. – a mole (skin)
• NATLIN
n. 1908 Sc. – a morsel, a fragment, a small quantity
• NATLING
adj. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – trifling, fanciful, ornamental
• NAT-NATTING
n. 1893 Eng. dial. – a light, quick knocking
• NATO
adj. 1968 US sl. – said of one who is not sexually aggressive
• NATOMY
n. 1. 1790 Eng. dial. – a skeleton
n. 2. 1834 Eng. dial. – a very thin, emaciated person or animal, a ‘bag of bones’
n. 3. 1863 Eng. dial. – a pigmy, a diminutive person a small thin ‘slip of a fellow
• NATTARABLE
adj. 1848 Eng. dial. – natural
• NATTINESS
n. 20C colloq. – neatness; tidiness; spruceness
• NATTER
n. 1. 1866 orig. Eng. dial. – aimless conversation; incessantly complaining talk
n. 2. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – a loafer
n. 3. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – a woman who works constantly at something which makes a slight noise, such as knitting
n. 4. 1908 Sc. & Eng. dial. – a crabbed, nagging person; a continual chatterer; a fault-finder
vb. 1. 1829 Eng. dial. – to grumble; to fret; to scold; to speak in a querulous or peevish manner
vb. 2. 1871 Eng. dial. – to gnaw, to nag, as pain
vb. 3. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – to be busy in a trifling manner
vb. 4. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – to work continuously at something which makes a slight noise; to clatter; to work a person hard
vb. 5. 1908 Sc. – to work slowly and ineffectually; to potter
vb. 6. 1908 Sc. – to drizzle, esp. along with a high wind
vb. 7. 1943 UK – to engage in aimless conversation; to chat
vb. 8. 1963 Sc. – to nibble into small pieces, esp. of a mouse
• NATTER-CROP
n. Bk1898 Eng. dial. – a peevish person; an ill-natured, petulant, malignant, captious person
• NATTERED
adj. 1853 Eng. dial. – peevish, complaining
• NATTEREL
n. 1919 Sc. – a crabbed, nagging person; a continual chatterer
• NATTERIE
adj. 1825 Sc. – peevish, crabbed, cantankerous, irascible, given to sharp caustic talk
• NATTERLY
adj. 1. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – first-rate; ‘rattling’
adj. 2. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – neat, natty
adv. 1884 Eng. dial. – naturally
• NATTI
n. 1908 Sc. – a cross-tempered, malicious or pert fellow
• NATTINESS
n. 1. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – cleverness, ingenuity
n. 2. 20C colloq. – neatness; tidiness; spruceness
• NATTLE
adj. 1868 Eng. dial. – quick to take offense; touchy; irritable; cross
n. 1. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – a light, quick knocking; a rattling sound
n. 2. 1908 Sc. – a small piece of anything; a morsel
vb. 1. 1825 N. Eng. dial. – to make a light rattling, crackling, or tapping noise
vb. 2. 1825 Sc. & Eng. dial. – to nibble; to chew with difficulty; to gnaw; to nip
vb. 3. 1825 Sc. – to mumble in a toothless fashion
vb. 4. 1866 Sc. – to cut awkwardly, as with a blunt knife
vb. 5. 1900 Sc. – to grumble, to nag, to carp
vb. 6. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – to be bustling and stirring about trifles; to be very busy in doing nothing at all
vb. 7. 1908 Sc. – to work slowly, to dawdle, to trifle
• NATTLED
adj. 1. 1854 Eng. dial. – of persons or animals: starved; stunted in growth; pinched with cold
adj. 2. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – cross, ill-tempered, irritable
adj. 3. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – knotted, tangled
• NATTLER
n. 1. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – one who gets his living by doing odd jobs
n. 2. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – a rap over the knuckles
n. 3. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – one who is active with hands, feet, or tongue; an expert
• NATTLING
adj. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – rattling, tapping, esp. of one who knocks his heels together while dancing
n. 1867 Eng. dial. – a tapping; a light rattling noise
• NATTLY
adj. 1. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – first-rate; ‘rattling’
adj. 2. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – neat, natty
• NATTY
adj. 1. 1557 colloq. – neat, stylish, tidy
adj. 2. 1789 sl. – fashionable
adj. 3. 1870 Eng. dial. – round
adj. 4. 1888 Sc. & Eng. dial. – handy, deft; industrious; clever, ingenious
adj. 5. 1974 Jamaica sl. – of hair: matted, uncombed; in a condition to be formed into dreadlocks
n. 1. 1818 – a neatly smart or spruce person
n. 2. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – the buttocks, esp. of children
n. 3. 1974 sl. – hair that is knotty or matted, as in Rastafarian dreadlocks
n. 4. 1976 Jamaica sl. – a wearer of dreadlocks, esp. a Rastafarian
n. 5. 2002 US sl. – any natural light beer
• NATTY-BODY
n. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – a tidy, well-conducted person
• NATTY-LAD
n. 1785 thieves’ sl. – a young thief or pickpocket
• NATURABLE
adj. 1. 1848 Eng. dial. – natural
adj. 2. 1877 Eng. dial. – of a kindly disposition; benevolent; homely
• NATURAL
adj. 1. 1412-20 obs. – of children: legitimate
adj. 2. a1533 obs. – native to a country; native-born
adj. 3. 1714 Sc. obs. – in full possession of one’s wits or senses, normal
adj. 4. 1825 Sc. obs. – of the weather: pleasant, genial, mild
adj. 3. 1859 Amer. sl. – not squeamish
adj. 4. 1894 Sc. – affable, familiar, gentle; guileless
adj. 6. 1946 Amer. dial. – familiar
adj. 7. 1970 Amer. dial. – genuine, real
adv. 1. 1851 Eng. dial. – quite; entirely
adv. 2. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – very nearly; almost
n. 1. 1509 obs. – a native of a place or country
n. 2. 1533 – a half-witted person; one naturally deficient in intellect; an idiot; a simpleton
n. 3. 1665 obs. rare – native language
n. 4. 1688 obs. – a mistress
n. 5. c1696 sl. – a bastard
n. 6. 1749 Amer. sl. – a person having a natural talent; one especially well suited for or likely to succeed in a particular endeavour; one who excels in something because of unusual ability
n. 7. 1859 Amer. thieves’ sl. – a clever, quick-witted, generous man
n. 8. 1894 Amer. sl. – one’s life
n. 9. 1912 Amer. sl. – in gambling: a winning combination in various gambling games
n. 10. 1920 Amer. sl. – something that is sure to succeed; a winner
n. 11. 1930 Amer. prison sl. – a life sentence
n. 12. 1930 Amer. prison sl. – a seven-year sentence
n. 13. Bk1942 Amer. sl. – something excellent
n. 14. 1962 US sl. – in craps: a winning roll of seven on the first toss
n. 15. 1965 African-American sl. – hair worn cut and combed but without oils or grease; groomed or ungroomed bushy hair; the hair is usually sculpted in a tall and rounded fashion like a crown
n. 16. 1967 Brit. beatniks’ usage – a conventional person
n. 17. 1967 US sl. – a Seven-Up™ soda
n. 18. 1990 US sl. – in pool: a shot that cannot be missed or a game that cannot be lose
• THE NATURAL
n. 1589 obs. – the real thing or person; the life
• NATURAL BAIRN
n. Bk1905 Sc. & Eng. dial. – an illegitimate child
• NATURAL-BORN
adj. 1915 Amer. sl. – by nature, absolute; thoroughgoing
• NATURAL-CHILD
n. 17C – a bastard
• NATURALESQUE
adj. 1880 – having the characteristics of nature or natural objects
• NATURAL FOOL
n. c1430 – one who is by nature deficient in intelligence; a fool or simpleton by birth
• NATURAL-HEARTED
adj. 1882 Sc. – kind, affectionate; simple-hearted
• NATURAL-HEARTEDNESS
n. Bk1905 Sc. – kindness, affection
• NATURAL IDIOT
n. 1540 obs. – one who is by nature deficient in intelligence; a fool or simpleton by birth
• NATURALIST
n. 1631 obs. – one ‘natural’ to a country; a native
• NATURALITY
n. 1822 Sc. – natural feeling
• NATURALIZANT
n. 1653 obs. rare – a natural citizen or inhabitant
• NATURALIZED
adj. 1924 Amer. dial. – accustomed
• NATURAL-LOOKING
adj. 1946 Amer. dial. – familiar
• NATURALLY
adv. 1. 1526 obs. rare – normally, regularly
adv. 2. 1546 obs. – physically, materially
adv. 3. 1655 obs. rare – simply, easily
• NATURAL MEMBER
n. 17C – the penis
• NATURALNESS
n. 1. 1553 obs. – natural instinct, affection, or sympathy
n. 2. 1656 obs. rare – genuineness, legitimacy
• NATURAL PARTS
n. 1601 obs. – the genitals, male or female, the privy members
• NATURAL PLACES
n. 1569 obs. – the genitals, male or female, the privy members
• NATURAL PUNK
n. 1972 US sl. – in prison: a man who had been homosexual outside prison
• NATURALS
n. 1650 obs. – the genitals, male or female
• NATURALTY
n. 1822 Sc. – natural feeling
• NATURANT
adj. 1635 obs. rare – creative, generating
• NATURATE
adj. 1509 obs. rare – created, endowed with a specific nature
• NATURATELY
adv. 1509 obs. rare – by creation
• NATURE
n. 1. 14C – the menses
n. 2. 1547 sl. – semen
n. 3. 16C – the libido; male sexual potency
n. 4. 1605 obs. exc. Eng. dial. – natural feeling or affection
n. 5. 1750 Eng. dial. – the pudendum of a mare
n. 6. 1895 Eng. dial. – maturity; perfection
n. 7. Bk1902 sl. – the generative organs, male or female
n. 8. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – kindred
n. 9. 2002 US sl. – the penis
• NATURE BOY
n. 1. 1948 US sl. – a naive, innocent man or boy; used ironically
n. 2. 1955 US sl. – a boy in need of a haircut
• NATURE BUMP
n. 1969 Amer. dial. – a pimple
• NATURE CALLS
phr. 1984 Brit. sl. – used for announcing, and for excusing yourself for, a needed visit to the toilet; the condition of needing to relieve yourself
• NATURE-COURSE
n. 1974 Amer. dial. – sexual intercourse
• NATURE-FOOL
n. 1893 Eng. dial. – a born idiot; a simpleton
• NATURE HEAD
n. 1969 Amer. dial. – a pimple
• NATURELLY
adv. 1. c1250 obs. – naturally; by nature
adv. 2. 1484 obs. rare – carnally
• NATURELY
adj. c1511 rare – natural
• NATURE’S CALL
n. 20C US colloq. – the feeling of a need to eliminate wastes; defecation or urination
• NATURE’S DUTY
n. c1707 sl. – copulation
• NATURE’S FONTS
n. L19 Brit. euphemism – the breasts
• NATURE’S FOUNTS
n. Bk1902 sl. – the female breasts
• NATURE’S GARB
n. Bk1902 sl. – nakedness
• NATURE SPOT
n. Bk1982 euphemism – a birthmark, mole, or wart
• NATURE’S PRIVY-SEAL
n. c1661 sl. – the female pudendum
• NATURE STOP
n. M20 US colloq. – a stop (in highway travel) to urinate
• NATURE’S SCYTHE
n. 1766 sl. – the penis
• NATURESSE
n. a1412 obs. – natural affection or feeling; a generous act
• NATURE’S TREASURY
n. 1635 sl. – the female pudendum
• NATURE’S TUFTED-TREASURE
n. 1827 sl. – the female pudendum
• NATURE’S VEIL
n. Bk1982 sl. – the female pubic hair
• NATURISTIC
adj. 1886 rare – connected with nature
• NATURLY
adv. 1. 1884 Eng. dial. – naturally
adv. 2. Bk1905 Eng. dial. – really, positively, certainly
Back to INDEX N
Back to DICTIONARY