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1 mengunggis
nibble, gnaw at. -
2 unggis
nibble, gnaw at. -
3 catuk
1. 1) peck at, nibble k.r(of fowl). 2) rap, tap on. 3) hit, harm with the edge of a weapon. 4) cut into k.r(a coconut). 5) a hammer. 2. 1) a spoonful. 2) contents of half a coconut shell. 3. ter-catuk sit with head bowed. -
4 cekit
cekit-cekit small pricking pain. men-cekit nibble at, peck at. -
5 gelonggong
ber-gelonggong eat through, nibble at. -
6 gerit
1. sound of scratch k.r(e.g. chalk across black-board). ber-, meng- gerit screech k.r(from scraping), squeak k.r(of chair on floor). 2. meng-gerit nibble, gnaw. -
7 kerat
1. 1) slice, piece, part. 2) part k.r(of a house, road, town). 2. sound of munching. meng-k.r(k)erat nibble, gnaw. 3. see KARAT. 4 see KRAT. -
8 kerikit
meng-kerikit gnaw, nibble. -
9 kerip
meng-kerip crackle k.r(of gravel, etc.). 2 nibble, gnaw k.r(of rat, squirrel). -
10 kerumit
meng-kerumit gnaw, nibble k.r(of rabbits, mice). -
11 sekutil
a nibble, tiny piece. -
12 unggis
gnaw; nibble
См. также в других словарях:
nibble at — nibble (away) at [phrasal verb] nibble (away) at (something) : to make (something) disappear or go away very slowly Police have been nibbling (away) at crime in the city for years. [=police have been very slowly reducing the amount of crime in… … Useful english dictionary
Nibble — Nib ble, v. t. To bite upon something gently or cautiously; to eat a little of a thing, as by taking small bits cautiously; as, fishes nibble at the bait. [1913 Webster] Instead of returning a full answer to my book, he manifestly falls a… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
nibble — [n] morsel, bite crumb, peck, snack, soupçon, taste, tidbit; concepts 458,831 Ant. mouthful nibble [v] bite, pick at crop, eat, eat like a bird*, gnaw, munch, nip*, nosh on*, peck*, snack; concept 169 Ant. gorge … New thesaurus
Nibble — Nib ble, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Nibbled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Nibbling}.] [Cf. {Nip}.] To bite by little at a time; to seize gently with the mouth; to eat slowly or in small bits. [1913 Webster] Thy turfy mountains, where live nibbling sheep. Shak.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
nibble — ib ble, n. 1. A small or cautious bite. [1913 Webster] 2. Hence: (Fig.) An expression of interest, often tentative, as at the beginning of a sale or negotiation process. [PJC] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
nibble — ► VERB 1) take small bites out of. 2) gently bite at. 3) gradually erode. 4) show cautious interest in a project. ► NOUN 1) an instance of nibbling. 2) a small piece of food bitten off … English terms dictionary
nibble — [nib′əl] vt. nibbled, nibbling [LME nebyllen, prob. akin to MLowG nibbelen: for IE base see NIP1] 1. to eat (food) with quick bites, taking only a small amount at a time, as a mouse does 2. to bite at with small, gentle bites vi. 1. to take small … English World dictionary
Nibble — This article is about the information storage unit. For other uses, see Nibble (disambiguation). A character table ordered by nibbles. In computing, a nibble (often nybble or even nyble to simulate the spelling of byte) is a four bit… … Wikipedia
nibble — nib|ble1 [ˈnıbəl] v [Date: 1500 1600; Origin: Perhaps from Low German nibbeln to chew bits off ] 1.) [I and T] to eat small amounts of food by taking very small bites ▪ He nibbled the biscuit cautiously. nibble at ▪ There s a fish nibbling at my… … Dictionary of contemporary English
nibble — [[t]nɪ̱b(ə)l[/t]] nibbles, nibbling, nibbled 1) VERB If you nibble food, you eat it by biting very small pieces of it, for example because you are not very hungry. [V n] He started to nibble his biscuit... [V at/on n] She nibbled at the corner of … English dictionary
Nibble — Un nibble (ou, plus rarement nybble) est, en informatique, un agrégat de 4 bits, soit un demi octet. Un nibble contenant 4 bits, il peut prendre seize (24) valeurs différentes et correspond donc à un seul chiffre hexadécimal, d où son autre… … Wikipédia en Français