(intransitive, India) To be satisfied or receive pleasure.
(transitive) To have the use or benefit of something.
(transitive) To receive pleasure or satisfaction from something.
jacey
jacky
jacky
noun
(UK, dialect, archaic) English gin.
(slang, derogatory) A sailor.
jaggy
jaggy
adj
jagged, toothed or serrated
jakey
jakey
noun
(chiefly Scotland) A homeless drunk.
jamey
jammy
jammy
adj
(Britain, colloquial, of a person) Lucky, especially undeservedly so. From the popular biscuits Jammie Dodgers, which were named after the Beano character Roger The Dodger (a child famed for his ability to avoid chores and homework).
Covered in jam.
Resembling jam in taste, texture, etc.
noun
(slang) A gun.
attributive form of jammies
jandy
janey
janty
janty
adj
Archaic form of jaunty.
janye
janys
japyx
jarry
jarry
adj
Jarring, reverberating.
jarvy
jarvy
noun
Alternative form of jarvey
jasey
jasey
noun
A wig, originally made of worsted wool.
jassy
jayem
jayme
jayne
jayne
Proper noun
derived from a medieval variant of
name, a twentieth century elaborate spelling of Jane.
jazey
jazzy
jazzy
adj
Flashy or showy.
In the style of jazz.
Lacking focus; jittery or jangly.
jeddy
jeery
jeery
adj
Jeering.
jeffy
jeffy
Proper noun
A nickname for Jeff or Geoffrey.
jelly
jelly
adj
(slang) Jealous.
noun
(Canada, US, Britain (certain specific usages)) A clear or translucent fruit preserve, made from fruit juice and set using either naturally occurring, or added, pectin. Normally known as "jam" in Commonwealth English but see redcurrant jelly and jeely
(Caribbean, Jamaica) Clipping of jelly coconut.
(New Zealand, Australia, Britain) A dessert made by boiling gelatine, sugar and some flavouring (often derived from fruit) and allowing it to set, known as "jello" in North America.
(US, slang) A large backside, especially a woman's.
(colloquial) A jelly shoe.
(colloquial) Clipping of gelignite.
(colloquial, US) Blood.
(slang, now rare) A pretty girl; a girlfriend.
(zoology) A jellyfish.
A savoury substance, derived from meat, that has the same texture as the dessert.
Any substance or object having the consistency of jelly.
verb
To make jelly.
To wiggle like jelly.
jemmy
jemmy
adj
(archaic) Neat; elegant.
noun
(Australia, slang) An immigrant.
(archaic, Britain, slang) A sheep's head used as food.
(obsolete, slang) A greatcoat.
Alternative spelling of jimmy (crowbar).
verb
Alternative spelling of jimmy (open with a crowbar).
To shoehorn, to cram.
jenny
jenny
noun
A catmill.
A device for spinning thread from fiber onto multiple spindles (also called spinning jenny).
A female creature of certain kinds, such as wren and donkey.
In billiards and similar games, a powerful follow shot with plenty of topspin.
jerky
jerky
adj
Characterized by physical jerking.
Having the behavior of a jerk (unpleasant person).
noun
Lean meat cured and preserved by cutting into thin strips and air-drying in the sun.
verb
(transitive) To cure and preserve (meat) by drying it, making jerky.
jerry
jerry
adj
(dated) Jerry-built.
noun
(Britain, slang) A chamber pot.
(ethnic slur) Alternative letter-case form of Jerry: a German.
jessy
jetty
jetty
adj
(archaic) Made of jet, or like jet in color.
noun
(architecture) A part of a building that jets or projects beyond the rest, and overhangs the wall below.
A structure of wood or stone extended into the sea to influence the current or tide, or to protect a harbor or beach.
A wharf or dock extending from the shore.
verb
(obsolete, intransitive) To jut out; to project.
jewry
jewry
Noun
The Jewish population of the world collectively; the Jewish population of a locale.
The land of the Jews; Judea.
jibby
jiffy
jiffy
noun
(UK) Short for jiffy bag, a padded envelope.
(colloquial) A very short, unspecified length of time.
(computing) A unit of time defined by the frequency of its basic timer – historically, and by convention, 0.01 of a second, but some computer operating systems use other values.
(electronics) The length of an alternating current power cycle (1/60 or 1/50 of a second).
(physics) The time taken for light to travel a specified distance in a vacuum, usually one centimetre, but sometimes one foot or the width of a nucleon.