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stupid and clumsy person

См. также в других словарях:

  • klutz — AND klotz [klats AND klats] n. a stupid and clumsy person. □ Don’t be a klutz! □ Some klotz put mustard in the stew …   Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

  • Mom and Dad Save the World — Directed by Greg Beeman Produced by J. Max Kirishima Michael Phillips Written by Chris Matheson Ed Solomon …   Wikipedia

  • golem — /goh leuhm, lem/, n. 1. Jewish Folklore. a figure artificially constructed in the form of a human being and endowed with life. 2. a stupid and clumsy person; blockhead. 3. an automaton. [1895 1900; ( < Yiddish goylem) < Heb golem embryo, larva,… …   Universalium

  • loobies — n. lubber, clumsy and stupid person, awkward person; stupid and lazy person; idiot, fool …   English contemporary dictionary

  • looby — n. lubber, clumsy and stupid person, awkward person; stupid and lazy person; idiot, fool …   English contemporary dictionary

  • Vera Louise Gorman-Novak — Vera Novak (born Vera Louise Gorman) was a fictional character in the long running television series Alice . She was played by actress Beth Howland. The Dingy Vera was the only original waitress besides Alice who lasted all of the show s run. She …   Wikipedia

  • ding-dong — /ˈdɪŋ dɒŋ/ (say ding dong) noun 1. the sound of a bell. 2. any similar sound of repeated strokes. 3. Colloquial a loud and vigorous argument. 4. Colloquial a foolish, stupid or clumsy person. –adjective 5. repeated in succession or alternation. 6 …  

  • muff — /mʌf / (say muf) noun 1. a kind of thick tubular case covered with fur or other material, in which the hands are placed for warmth. 2. a tuft of feathers on the sides of the head of certain fowls. 3. Colloquial (taboo) the vagina and external… …  

  • palooka — /pəˈlukə/ (say puh loohkuh) noun Colloquial a stupid or clumsy person, etc. {early 20th century US slang, popularised by Joe Palooka, a boxer in a US comic strip of the 1930s and 1940s} …  

  • Yiddish words used by English-speaking Jews — Yiddish words may be used in a primarily English language context. An English sentence that uses these words sometimes is said to be in Yinglish, however the primary meaning of Yinglish is an anglicism used in Yiddish. This secondary sense of the …   Wikipedia

  • List of British words not widely used in the United States — Differences between American and British English American English …   Wikipedia

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