Reverse Dictionary: FUEL

ADJECTIVES
2001 — FAT of a fuel mixture: too rich → US bikers’ usage


NOUNS
1200 — ELET fuel → obs. exc. Eng. dial.
1300 — ELDIN — ELDING any kind of fuel, esp. inflammable material such as peat, sticks, brushwood, etc.; firewood → obs. exc. Eng. dial.
1350 — TALWOOD wood for fuel, cut up usually to a prescribed size → obs.
1521 — BETTING material for a fire; fuel → obs.
1669 — OLLARDS decayed branches of trees or small pieces of wood used as fuel for warming furnaces, etc.; fuel → Eng. dial.
1669 — OLLET decayed branches of trees or small pieces of wood used as fuel for warming furnaces, etc.; fuel → Eng. dial.
1681 — COW-BLAKES dried cow dung used for fuel → Eng. dial.
1796 — FAG dried peat; turf cut for fuel → Eng. dial.
1826 — TUG peat used for fuel → Amer. dial.
1850 — COW WOOD dried cow dung used as fuel → Amer. dial.
1865 — SCONE a piece of dried cow-dung used as fuel → Sc.
1887 — TANNEL dried twigs or other vegetation used for fuel, firewood → Sc.
..20C — POP GOES THE WEASEL diesel → rhyming sl.
..20C — PRAIRIE FUEL hunks of dried cattle dung used for fuel → US colloq.
1902 — INGLIN fuel → Eng. dial. (Bk.)
1905 — PAD dried cow-dung, formerly collected for fuel → Eng. dial., obs. (Bk.)
1909 — JUICE petrol, diesel → UK sl.
1910 — SAUCE petrol, gasoline → US sl.
1914 — GRASSOLINE dried animal dung used as fuel → Amer. dial.
1931 — FIRING fuel → Amer. dial.
1938 — PUSH WATER gasoline → Amer. dial.
1942 — BUG JUICE gasoline → Amer. sl.
1945 — DIRTY MIXTURE gasoline → World War II Amer. sl.
1962 — MEXICAN CREDIT CARD (derogatory) a hose and siphon used for pilfering gasoline at night → 1962 Amer. sl.
1966 — OKIE CREDIT CARD a siphon tube used for stealing gasoline → US jocular usage
1966 — OKLAHOMA CREDIT CARD a siphon tube used for stealing gasoline → US jocular usage
1968 — PUSH JUICE gasoline → Amer. dial.
1970 — ALKIE — ALKY methanol used as a fuel for racing cars → US sl.
1974 — MO-GAS gasoline for vehicles’ ‘motor-gas’ → Amer. military usage
1976 — DINOSAUR JUICE petrol, gasoline → US sl.
1976 — MOTION LOTION motor fuel → US sl.
1979 — MEXICAN FILLING STATION a siphon used for stealing petrol/gas from a parked car → US sl.
1990 — AVGAS jet fuel → US sl.
1992 — FLANAGAN (AND ALLEN) a gallon (of motor fuel) → UK rhyming sl.


NOUNS – PERSON
1945 — GAS HOG one who used too much gasoline during the gasoline shortages, abusing the gasoline-rationing privileges → World War II Amer. sl. 


VERBS
1631 — FUELIZE to supply with fuel → obs.
1905 — TIND to add fuel to a fire → Eng. dial. (Bk.)