J
1: a unit of electrical energy equal to the work done when a current of one ampere passes through a resistance of one ohm for one second [syn: {joule}, {watt second}] 2: the 10th letter of the Roman a...
J particle
1: a neutral meson with a large mass [syn: {psi particle}]
J. B. Rhine
1: United States parapsychologist (1895-1980) [syn: {Rhine}, {Joseph Banks Rhine}]
J. B. S. Haldane
1: Scottish geneticist (son of John Haldane) who contributed to the development of population genetics; a popularizer of science and a Marxist (1892-1964) [syn: {Haldane}, {John Burdon Sanderson Halda...
J. C. Maxwell
1: Scottish physicist whose equations unified electricity and magnetism and who recognized the electromagnetic nature of light (1831-1879) [syn: {Maxwell}, {James Clerk Maxwell}]
J. Craig Ventner
1: United States geneticist who published the complete base sequences for all the genes of a free-living organism, the influenza bacterium; later led team that developed a first draft of the entire hu...
J. D. Salinger
1: United States writer (born 1919) [syn: {Salinger}, {Jerome David Salinger}]
J. E. Johnston
1: Confederate general in the American Civil War; led the Confederate troops in the West (1807-1891) [syn: {Johnston}, {Joseph Eggleston Johnston}]
J. Edgar Hoover
1: United States lawyer who was director of the FBI for 48 years (1895-1972) [syn: {Hoover}, {John Edgar Hoover}]
J. J. Hill
1: United States railroad tycoon (1838-1916) [syn: {Hill}, {James Jerome Hill}]
J. M. Barrie
1: Scottish dramatist and novelist; created Peter Pan (1860-1937) [syn: {Barrie}, {James Barrie}, {James Matthew Barrie}, {Sir James Matthew Barrie}]
J. M. Synge
1: Irish poet and playwright whose plays are based on rural Irish life (1871-1909) [syn: {Synge}, {John Millington Synge}, {Edmund John Millington Synge}]
J. P. Morgan
1: United States financier and philanthropist (1837-1913) [syn: {Morgan}, {John Pierpont Morgan}]
J. R. Firth
1: English linguist who contributed to linguistic semantics and to prosodic phonology and who was noted for his insistence on studying both sound and meaning in context (1890-1960) [syn: {Firth}, {Joh...
J.R.R. Tolkien
1: British philologist and writer of fantasies (born in South Africa) (1892-1973) [syn: {Tolkien}, {John Ronald Reuel Tolkien}]
jab
1: a sharp hand gesture (resembling a blow); "he warned me with a jab with his finger"; "he made a thrusting motion with his fist" [syn: {jabbing}, {poke}, {poking}, {thrust}, {thrusting}] 2: a quick ...
Jabalpur
1: an industrial city of central India southeast of Delhi [syn: {Jubbulpore}]
Jabat al-Tahrir al-Filistiniyyah
1: a terrorist group formed in 1977 as the result of a split with the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine; became a satellite of al-Fatah; made terrorist attacks on Israel across the Lebanes...
jabber
1: rapid and indistinct speech [syn: {jabbering}, {gabble}] v : talk in a noisy, excited, or declamatory manner [syn: {rant}, {mouth off}, {spout}, {rabbit on}, {rave}]
jabberer
1: someone whose talk is trivial drivel [syn: {driveller}]
jabbering
1: talking idly or incoherently; "blithering (or blathering) idiot"; "jabbering children"; "gabbling housewives"; "a babbling hospital inmate" [syn: {blathering}, {blithering}, {babbling}] n : rapid a...
jabberwocky
1: nonsensical language (according to Lewis Carroll)
jabiru
1: large mostly white Australian stork [syn: {policeman bird}, {black-necked stork}, {Xenorhyncus asiaticus}] 2: large black-and-white stork of tropical Africa; its red bill has a black band around th...
Jabiru mycteria
1: large white stork of warm regions of the world especially America [syn: {jabiru}]
jaboncillo
1: evergreen of tropical America having pulpy fruit containing saponin which was used as soap by native Americans [syn: {China tree}, {false dogwood}, {chinaberry}, {Sapindus saponaria}]
jabot
1: a ruffle on the front of a woman's blouse or a man's shirt
jaboticaba
1: small evergreen tropical tree native to Brazil and West Indies but introduced into southern United States; grown in Brazil for its edible tough-skinned purple grapelike fruit that grows all along t...
jaboticaba tree
1: small evergreen tropical tree native to Brazil and West Indies but introduced into southern United States; grown in Brazil for its edible tough-skinned purple grapelike fruit that grows all along t...
jacamar
1: tropical American insectivorous bird having a long sharp bill and iridescent green or bronze plumage
jacaranda
1: an important Brazilian timber tree yielding a heavy hard dark-colored wood streaked with black [syn: {Brazilian rosewood}, {caviuna wood}, {Dalbergia nigra}]
jacinth
1: a red transparent variety of zircon used as a gemstone [syn: {hyacinth}]
jack
1: a small worthless amount; "you don't know jack" [syn: {diddly-squat}, {diddlysquat}, {diddly-shit}, {diddlyshit}, {diddly}, {diddley}, {squat}, {shit}] 2: a man who serves as a sailor [syn: {marine...
jack bean
1: annual semi-erect bushy plant of tropical South America bearing long pods with white seeds grown especially for forage [syn: {wonder bean}, {giant stock bean}, {Canavalia ensiformis}]
Jack Benny
1: United States comedian known for his timeing and delivery and self-effacing humor (1894-1974) [syn: {Benny}, {Benjamin Kubelsky}]
jack crevalle
1: fish of western Atlantic and Gulf of Mexico [syn: {crevalle jack}, {Caranx hippos}]
Jack Dempsey
1: United States prizefighter who was world heavyweight champion (1895-1983) [syn: {Dempsey}, {William Harrison Dempsey}, {The Manassa Mauler}]
Jack Frost
1: a personification of frost or winter weather
Jack Kennedy
1: 35th President of the United States; established the Peace Corps; assassinated in Dallas (1917-1963) [syn: {Kennedy}, {John Fitzgerald Kennedy}, {JFK}, {President Kennedy}, {President John F. Kenne...
Jack Kerouac
1: United States writer who was a leading figure of the beat generation (1922-1969) [syn: {Kerouac}, {Jean-Louis Lebris de Kerouac}]
jack ladder
1: (nautical) a hanging ladder of ropes or chains supporting wooden or metal rungs or steps [syn: {Jacob's ladder}, {pilot ladder}]
Jack Lemmon
1: United States film actor (born in 1925) [syn: {Lemmon}, {John Uhler}]
Jack London
1: United States writer of novels based on experiences in the Klondike gold rush (1876-1916) [syn: {London}, {John Griffith Chaney}]
jack mackerel
1: a California food fish [syn: {horse mackerel}, {Spanish mackerel}, {saurel}, {Trachurus symmetricus}]
Jack Nicklaus
1: United States golfer considered by many to be the greatest golfer of all time (born in 1940) [syn: {Nicklaus}, {Jack William Nicklaus}]
jack oak
1: a common scrubby deciduous tree of central and southeastern United States having dark bark and broad 3-lobed (club-shaped) leaves; tends to form dense thickets [syn: {blackjack oak}, {blackjack}, {...
Jack of all trades
1: a person able to do a variety of different jobs acceptably well 2: a man skilled in various odd jobs and other small tasks [syn: {handyman}, {odd-job man}]
jack off
1: get sexual gratification through self-stimulation [syn: {masturbate}, {wank}, {fuck off}, {she-bop}, {jerk off}]
jack pine
1: slender medium-sized 2-needled pine of eastern North America; with yellow-green needles and scaly gray to red-brown fissured bark [syn: {Pinus banksiana}]
jack plane
1: a carpenter's plane for rough surfacing
Jack Roosevelt Robinson
1: United States baseball player; first Black to play in the major leagues (1919-1972) [syn: {Robinson}, {Jackie Robinson}]
jack salmon
1: pike-like freshwater perches [syn: {walleye}, {walleyed pike}, {Stizostedion vitreum}]
jack up
1: lift with a special device; "jack up the car so you can change the tire" [syn: {jack}]
Jack William Nicklaus
1: United States golfer considered by many to be the greatest golfer of all time (born in 1940) [syn: {Nicklaus}, {Jack Nicklaus}]
jack-a-lantern
1: a large poisonous agaric with orange caps and narrow clustered stalks; the gills are luminescent [syn: {jack-o-lantern fungus}, {jack-o-lantern}, {Omphalotus illudens}]
jack-by-the-hedge
1: European herb that smells like garlic [syn: {garlic mustard}, {hedge garlic}, {sauce-alone}, {Alliaria officinalis}]
jack-in-the-box
1: plaything consisting of a toy clown that jumps out of a box when the lid is opened [also: {jacks-in-the-box} (pl)]
jack-in-the-pulpit
1: common American spring-flowering woodland herb having sheathing leaves and an upright club-shaped spadix with overarching green and purple spathe producing scarlet berries [syn: {Indian turnip}, {w...
jack-o'-lantern
1: a pale light sometimes seen at night over marshy ground [syn: {friar's lantern}, {ignis fatuus}, {will-o'-the-wisp}] 2: lantern carved from a pumpkin
jack-o-lantern
1: a large poisonous agaric with orange caps and narrow clustered stalks; the gills are luminescent [syn: {jack-o-lantern fungus}, {jack-a-lantern}, {Omphalotus illudens}]
jack-o-lantern fungus
1: a large poisonous agaric with orange caps and narrow clustered stalks; the gills are luminescent [syn: {jack-o-lantern}, {jack-a-lantern}, {Omphalotus illudens}]
Jack-tar
1: a man who serves as a sailor [syn: {mariner}, {seaman}, {tar}, {Jack}, {old salt}, {seafarer}, {gob}, {sea dog}]
jackal
1: Old World nocturnal canine mammal closely related to the dog; smaller than a wolf; sometimes hunts in a pack but usually singly or as a member of a pair [syn: {Canis aureus}]
jackanapes
1: someone who is unimportant but cheeky and presumptuous [syn: {whippersnapper}, {lightweight}]
jackass
1: a man who is a stupid incompetent fool [syn: {fathead}, {goof}, {goofball}, {bozo}, {goose}, {cuckoo}, {twat}, {zany}] 2: male donkey [syn: {jack}]
jackass bat
1: large spotted bat of southwestern United States having enormous ears [syn: {spotted bat}, {Euderma maculata}]
jackass penguin
1: small penguin of South America and southern Africa with a braying call [syn: {Spheniscus demersus}]
jackboot
1: (19th century) a man's high tasseled boot [syn: {Hessian boot}, {hessian}, {Wellington}, {Wellington boot}]
jackdaw
1: common black-and-gray Eurasian bird noted for thievery [syn: {daw}, {Corvus monedula}]
jacket
1: a short coat 2: an outer wrapping or casing; "phonograph records were sold in cardboard jackets" 3: (dentistry) an artificial crown fitted over a broken or decayed tooth [syn: {jacket crown}] 4: th...
jacket crown
1: (dentistry) an artificial crown fitted over a broken or decayed tooth [syn: {jacket}]
jackfruit
1: East Indian tree cultivated for its immense edible fruit and seeds [syn: {jackfruit tree}, {Artocarpus heterophyllus}] 2: immense East Indian fruit resembling breadfruit of; its seeds are commonly ...
jackfruit tree
1: East Indian tree cultivated for its immense edible fruit and seeds [syn: {jackfruit}, {Artocarpus heterophyllus}]
jackhammer
1: a hammer driven by compressed air [syn: {air hammer}, {pneumatic hammer}]
Jackie Robinson
1: United States baseball player; first Black to play in the major leagues (1919-1972) [syn: {Robinson}, {Jack Roosevelt Robinson}]
jacking off
1: slang terms for masturbation [syn: {jerking off}, {hand job}, {wank}]
jackknife
1: a large knife with one or more folding blades [syn: {clasp knife}] 2: a dive in which the diver bends to touch the ankles before straightening out v : dive into the water bending the body at the wa...
jackknife clam
1: marine clam having a long narrow curved thin shell [syn: {razor clam}, {knife-handle}]
jackknife-fish
1: black-and-white drumfish with an erect elongated dorsal fin [syn: {Equetus lanceolatus}]
jacklight
1: a light used as lure in hunting or fishing at night v : hunt with a jacklight [syn: {jack}]
jackpot
1: the cumulative amount involved in a game (such as poker) [syn: {pot}, {kitty}] 2: any outstanding award
jacks
1: plaything consisting of small 6-pointed metal pieces that are used (along with a ball) to play the game of jacks [syn: {jackstones}] 2: a game in which jackstones are thrown and picked up in variou...
jackscrew
1: screw-operated jack [syn: {screw jack}]
jacksmelt
1: large silversides of Pacific coast of North America [syn: {Atherinopsis californiensis}]
jacksnipe
1: a small short-billed Old World snipe [syn: {half snipe}, {Limnocryptes minima}] 2: American sandpiper that inflates its chest when courting [syn: {pectoral sandpiper}, {Calidris melanotos}]
Jackson
1: English film actress who later became a member of Parliament (born in 1936) [syn: {Glenda Jackson}] 2: United States singer who began singing with his four brothers and later became a highly succes...
Jackson Pollock
1: United States artist famous for painting with a drip technique; a leader of abstract expressionism in America (1912-1956) [syn: {Pollock}]
Jacksonia
1: genus of yellow-flowered Australian unarmed or spiny shrubs without true leaves but having leaflike stems or branches [syn: {genus Jacksonia}]
Jacksonian
1: of or pertaining to Andrew Jackson or his presidency or his concepts of popular democracy
Jacksonian epilepsy
1: focal epilepsy in which the attack usually moves from distal to proximal limb muscles on the same side of the body
Jacksonville
1: Florida's largest city; a port and important commercial center in northeastern Florida
jackstones
1: plaything consisting of small 6-pointed metal pieces that are used (along with a ball) to play the game of jacks [syn: {jacks}] 2: a game in which jackstones are thrown and picked up in various gro...
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jackstraw
1: a thin strip of wood used in playing the game of jackstraws [syn: {spillikin}]
jackstraws
1: a game in which players try to pick each jackstraw (or spillikin) off of a pile without moving any of the others [syn: {spillikins}]
Jacob
1: French biochemist who (with Jacques Monod) studied regulatory processes in cells (born in 1920) [syn: {Francois Jacob}] 2: (Old Testament) son of Isaac; brother of Esau; father of the twelve patria...
Jacob Epstein
1: British sculptor (born in the United States) noted for busts and large controversial works (1880-1959) [syn: {Epstein}, {Sir Jacob Epstein}]
Jacob Harmensen
1: Dutch Protestant theologian who founded Arminianism which opposed the absolute predestinarianism of John Calvin (1559-1609) [syn: {Arminius}, {Jacobus Arminius}, {Jakob Hermandszoon}]
Jacob's ladder
1: pinnate-leaved European perennial having bright blue or white flowers [syn: {Greek valerian}, {charity}, {Polemonium caeruleum}, {Polemonium van-bruntiae}, {Polymonium caeruleum van-bruntiae}] 2: (...
Jacob's rod
1: asphodel having erect smooth unbranched stem either flexuous or straight
Jacob's staff
1: desert shrub of southwestern United States and Mexico having slender naked spiny branches that after the rainy season put forth foliage and clusters of red flowers [syn: {ocotillo}, {coachwhip}, {v...
Jacobean
1: of or relating to James I or his reign or times; "Jacobean writers" n : any distinguished personage during the reign of James I
Jacobean lily
1: Mexican bulbous herb cultivated for its handsome bright red solitary flower [syn: {Aztec lily}, {Strekelia formosissima}]
Jacobi
1: German mathematician (1804-1851) [syn: {Karl Gustav Jacob Jacobi}]
Jacobin
1: a member of the radical movement that instituted the Reign of Terror during the French Revolution
Jacobinic
1: of or relating to the Jacobins of the French Revolution; "Jacobinic terrorism" [syn: {Jacobinical}]
Jacobinical
1: of or relating to the Jacobins of the French Revolution; "Jacobinic terrorism" [syn: {Jacobinic}]
Jacobinism
1: the ideology of the most radical element of the French Revolution that instituted the Reign of Terror
Jacobite
1: a supporter of James II after he was overthrown or a supporter of the Stuarts
Jacobs
1: English writer of macabre short stories (1863-1943) [syn: {W. W. Jacobs}, {William Wymark Jacobs}] 2: United States writer and critic of urban planning (born in 1916) [syn: {Jane Jacobs}] 3: Dutch ...
Jacobus Arminius
1: Dutch Protestant theologian who founded Arminianism which opposed the absolute predestinarianism of John Calvin (1559-1609) [syn: {Arminius}, {Jacob Harmensen}, {Jakob Hermandszoon}]
jaconet
1: a lightweight cotton cloth with a smooth and slightly stiff finish; used for clothing and bandages
Jacopo Robusti
1: Italian painter of the Venetian school (1518-1594) [syn: {Tintoretto}]
Jacquard
1: French inventor of the Jacquard loom that could automatically weave complicated patterns (1752-1834) [syn: {Joseph M. Jacquard}, {Joseph Marie Jacquard}] 2: a highly figured fabric woven on a Jacqu...
Jacquard loom
1: a loom with an attachment for forming openings for the passage of the shuttle between the warp threads; used in weaving figured fabrics [syn: {Jacquard}]
Jacqueline Cochran
1: United States aviator who held several speed records and headed the women's Air Force pilots in World War II (1910-1980) [syn: {Cochran}]
Jacquemier's sign
1: a purplish discoloration of the mucous membrane of the vagina that occurs early in pregnancy
Jacques Alexandre Cesar Charles
1: French physicist and uathor of Charles's law which anticipated Gay-Lussac's law (1746-1823) [syn: {Charles}, {Jacques Charles}]
Jacques Bernoulli
1: Swiss mathematician (1654-1705) [syn: {Bernoulli}, {Jakob Bernoulli}, {James Bernoulli}]
Jacques Cartier
1: French explorer who explored the St. Lawrence river and laid claim to the region for France (1491-1557) [syn: {Cartier}]
Jacques Charles
1: French physicist and uathor of Charles's law which anticipated Gay-Lussac's law (1746-1823) [syn: {Charles}, {Jacques Alexandre Cesar Charles}]
Jacques Costeau
1: French underwater explorer (born in 1910) [syn: {Cousteau}, {Jacques Yves Costeau}]
Jacques Derrida
1: French philosopher and critic; exponent of deconstructionism (born in 1930) [syn: {Derrida}]
Jacques Etienne Montgolfier
1: French inventor who (with his brother Josef Michel Montgolfier) pioneered hot-air ballooning (1745-1799) [syn: {Montgolfier}]
Jacques Lipchitz
1: United States sculptor (born in Lithuania) who pioneered cubist sculpture (1891-1973) [syn: {Lipchitz}]
Jacques Loeb
1: United States physiologist (born in Germany) who did research on parthenogenesis (1859-1924) [syn: {Loeb}]
Jacques Louis David
1: French neoclassical painter who actively supported the French Revolution (1748-1825) [syn: {David}]
Jacques Lucien Monod
1: French biochemist who (with Francois Jacob) explained how genes are activated and suggested the existence of messenger RNA (1910-1976) [syn: {Monod}, {Jacques Monod}]
Jacques Marquette
1: French missionary who accompanied Louis Joliet in exploring the upper Mississippi River valley (1637-1675) [syn: {Marquette}, {Pere Jacques Marquette}]
Jacques Monod
1: French biochemist who (with Francois Jacob) explained how genes are activated and suggested the existence of messenger RNA (1910-1976) [syn: {Monod}, {Jacques Lucien Monod}]
Jacques Offenbach
1: French composer of many operettas and an opera (1819-1880) [syn: {Offenbach}]
Jacques Tati
1: French filmmaker (1908-1982) [syn: {Tati}, {Jacques Tatischeff}]
Jacques Yves Costeau
1: French underwater explorer (born in 1910) [syn: {Cousteau}, {Jacques Costeau}]
Jacquinia
1: sometimes placed in family Myrsinaceae [syn: {genus Jacquinia}]
Jacquinia armillaris
1: small West Indian shrub or tree with hard glossy seeds patterned yellow and brown that are used to make bracelets [syn: {bracelet wood}]
Jacquinia keyensis
1: West Indian shrub or small tree having leathery saponaceous leaves and extremely hard wood [syn: {barbasco}, {joewood}]
jactation
1: (pathology) extremely restless tossing and twitching usually by a person with a severe illness [syn: {jactitation}]
jactitate
1: move or stir about violently; "The feverish patient thrashed around in his bed" [syn: {convulse}, {thresh}, {thresh about}, {thrash}, {thrash about}, {slash}, {toss}]
jactitation
1: speaking of yourself in superlatives [syn: {boast}, {boasting}, {self-praise}] 2: (law) a false boast that can harm others; especially a false claim to be married to someone (formerly actionable at...
Jaculus
1: jerboas [syn: {genus Jaculus}]
Jacuzzi
1: a large whirlpool bathtub with underwater jets that massage the body
jade
1: similar to the color of jade; especially varying from bluish green to yellowish green [syn: {jade-green}] n 1: a semiprecious gemstone that takes a high polish; is usually green but sometimes whiti...
jade green
1: a light green color varying from bluish green to yellowish green [syn: {jade}]
jade vine
1: vigorous Philippine evergreen twining liana; grown for spectacular festoons of green flowers that resemble lobster claws [syn: {emerald creeper}, {Strongylodon macrobotrys}]
jade-green
1: similar to the color of jade; especially varying from bluish green to yellowish green [syn: {jade}]
jaded
1: exhausted; "my father's words had left me jaded and depressed"- William Styron [syn: {wearied}] 2: dulled by surfeit; "the amoral, jaded, bored upper classes"
jadeite
1: a hard green mineral consisting of sodium aluminum silicate in monoclinic crystalline form; a source of jade; found principally in Burma
jadestone
1: a semiprecious gemstone that takes a high polish; is usually green but sometimes whitish; consists of jadeite or nephrite [syn: {jade}]
jaeger
1: rapacious seabird that pursues weaker birds to make them drop their prey
Jafar
1: Indonesian terrorist and Islamic militant who commands the Laskar Jihad; uses violence to achieve political ends [syn: {Jaffar}, {Jaffar Umar Thalib}, {Jafar Umar Thalib}]
Jafar Umar Thalib
1: Indonesian terrorist and Islamic militant who commands the Laskar Jihad; uses violence to achieve political ends [syn: {Jaffar}, {Jafar}, {Jaffar Umar Thalib}]
Jaffa
1: a port in western Israel on the Mediterranean; incorporated into Tel Aviv in 1950 [syn: {Joppa}, {Yafo}]
Jaffar
1: Indonesian terrorist and Islamic militant who commands the Laskar Jihad; uses violence to achieve political ends [syn: {Jafar}, {Jaffar Umar Thalib}, {Jafar Umar Thalib}]
Jaffar Umar Thalib
1: Indonesian terrorist and Islamic militant who commands the Laskar Jihad; uses violence to achieve political ends [syn: {Jaffar}, {Jafar}, {Jafar Umar Thalib}]
Jafnea semitosta
1: the fruiting bodies of this discomycete have a firm texture and long retain their cup shape; the pale brown interior blends with the color of dead leaves
jag
1: a sharp projection on an edge or surface; "he clutched a jag of the rock" 2: a slit in a garment that exposes material of a different color underneath; used in Renaissance clothing 3: a flap along ...
Jagannath
1: an avatar of Vishnu [syn: {Jagannatha}, {Jagganath}, {Juggernaut}]
Jagannatha
1: an avatar of Vishnu [syn: {Jagannath}, {Jagganath}, {Juggernaut}]
Jagatai
1: a Turkic literary language of medieval central Asia (named for one of the sons of Genghis Khan) [syn: {Chagatai}, {Jaghatai}, {Eastern Turki}]
Jagganath
1: an avatar of Vishnu [syn: {Jagannath}, {Jagannatha}, {Juggernaut}]
jaggary
1: unrefined brown sugar made from palm sap [syn: {jaggery}, {jagghery}]
jaggedly
1: with a ragged and uneven appearance; "a long beard, raggedly cut" [syn: {raggedly}]
jaggedness
1: something irregular like a bump or crack in a smooth surface
Jagger
1: English rock star (born in 1943) [syn: {Mick Jagger}, {Michael Philip Jagger}]
jaggery
1: unrefined brown sugar made from palm sap [syn: {jagghery}, {jaggary}]
jaggery palm
1: fishtail palm of India to Malay Peninsula; sap yields a brown sugar (jaggery) and trunk pith yields sago [syn: {wine palm}, {kitul}, {kittul}, {kitul tree}, {toddy alm}, {Caryota urens}]
jagghery
1: unrefined brown sugar made from palm sap [syn: {jaggery}, {jaggary}]
jaggy
1: having an irregularly notched or toothed margin as though gnawed [syn: {erose}, {jagged}, {notched}, {toothed}] 2: having a sharply uneven surface or outline; "the jagged outline of the crags"; "sc...
Jaghatai
1: a Turkic literary language of medieval central Asia (named for one of the sons of Genghis Khan) [syn: {Chagatai}, {Jagatai}, {Eastern Turki}]
jagua
1: tree of the West Indies and northern South America bearing succulent edible orange-sized fruit [syn: {genipap fruit}, {marmalade box}, {Genipa Americana}]
jaguar
1: a large spotted feline of tropical America similar to the leopard; in some classifications considered a member of the genus Felis [syn: {panther}, {Panthera onca}, {Felis onca}]
jaguarondi
1: long-bodied long-tailed tropical American wildcat [syn: {jaguarundi}, {jaguarundi cat}, {eyra}, {Felis yagouaroundi}]
jaguarundi
1: long-bodied long-tailed tropical American wildcat [syn: {jaguarundi cat}, {jaguarondi}, {eyra}, {Felis yagouaroundi}]
jaguarundi cat
1: long-bodied long-tailed tropical American wildcat [syn: {jaguarundi}, {jaguarondi}, {eyra}, {Felis yagouaroundi}]
Jahvey
1: a name for the God of the Old Testament as transliterated from the Hebrew consonants YHVH [syn: {Yahweh}, {YHWH}, {Yahwe}, {Yahveh}, {YHVH}, {Yahve}, {Wahvey}, {Jahweh}, {Jehovah}, {JHVH}]
Jahweh
1: a name for the God of the Old Testament as transliterated from the Hebrew consonants YHVH [syn: {Yahweh}, {YHWH}, {Yahwe}, {Yahveh}, {YHVH}, {Yahve}, {Wahvey}, {Jahvey}, {Jehovah}, {JHVH}]
jai alai
1: a Basque or Spanish game played in a court with a ball and a wickerwork racket [syn: {pelota}]
jail
1: a correctional institution used to detain persons who are in the lawful custody of the government (either accused persons awaiting trial or convicted persons serving a sentence) [syn: {jailhouse}, ...
jail cell
1: a room where a prisoner is kept [syn: {cell}, {prison cell}]
jailbird
1: a person serving a sentence in a jail or prison [syn: {convict}, {con}, {inmate}, {gaolbird}]
jailbreak
1: an escape from jail; "the breakout was carefully planned" [syn: {break}, {breakout}, {gaolbreak}, {prisonbreak}, {prison-breaking}]
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