A major commercial timber species in the genus Dipterocarpus.
A thin balsam or wood oil derived from this tree, used in medicine and as a substitute for linseed oil in paint.
jaeger
jaeger
noun
A hunter's guide.
A rifle.
A sharpshooter, a rifleman, light infantry.
Any of three seabirds in the skua genus Stercorarius.
jageer
jagers
jagers
noun
plural of jager
jaggar
jagger
jagger
noun
A jagging iron used for crimping pies, cakes, etc.
A toothed chisel.
The offspring of a male jaguar and a female tiger.
carrier, carter
jag
peddler, hawker
jaghir
jaghir
noun
Alternative spelling of jagir
jagras
jaguar
jaguar
noun
A carnivorous spotted large cat native to South and Central America, Panthera onca.
jangar
jangro
jargle
jargle
verb
(obsolete) To emit a harsh or discordant sound.
jargon
jargon
noun
(countable) A language characteristic of a particular group.
(uncountable) A technical terminology unique to a particular subject.
(uncountable) Speech or language that is incomprehensible or unintelligible; gibberish.
Alternative form of jargoon (“A variety of zircon”)
verb
To utter jargon; to emit confused or unintelligible sounds.
jeggar
jegger
jigger
jigger
noun
(New Zealand) A short board or plank inserted into a tree for a person to stand on while cutting off higher branches.
(UK, slang, dated) A bicycle.
(US) A double-ended vessel, generally of stainless steel or other metal, one end of which typically measures 1 ½ fluid ounces, the other typically 1 fluid ounce.
(US) A measure of 1 ½ fluid ounces of liquor.
(US) A placeholder name for any small mechanical device.
(US, slang) A drink of whisky.
(archaic) A kind of early electric cash register.
(archaic) A streetcar drawn by a single horse.
(archaic) One who dances jigs; an odd-looking person.
(dialect, Liverpudlian, dated) An alleyway separating the backs of two rows of houses.
(fishing) A device used by fishermen to set their nets under the ice of frozen lakes.
(golf, dated) A golf club used to play low flying shots to the putting green from short distances.
(horse racing) An illicit electric shock device used to urge on a horse during a race.
(mining) One who jigs; a miner who sorts or cleans ore by the process of jigging.
(mining) The sieve used in sorting or separating ore.
(nautical) A jiggermast.
(nautical) A light tackle, consisting of a double and single block and the fall, used for various purposes, as to increase the purchase on a topsail sheet in hauling it home; the watch tackle.
(nautical, New England) A small fishing vessel, rigged like a yawl.
(obsolete, UK, thieves' cant) A door.
(pottery) A horizontal lathe used in producing flatware.
(rail transport, New Zealand) A railway jigger, a small motorized or human powered vehicle used by railway workers to traverse railway tracks.
(slang) An illegal distillery.
(slang, UK) A lock pick.
(slang, archaic) A prison; a jail cell.
(slang, euphemistic) A penis.
(slang, euphemistic) A vagina.
(textiles) A device used in the dyeing of cloth.
A larva of any of several mites in the family Trombiculidae; chigger, harvest mite.
A pendulum rolling machine for slicking or graining leather.
A sandflea, Tunga penetrans, of the order Siphonaptera; chigoe.
A warehouse crane.
The bridge or rest for the cue in billiards.
verb
(pottery) To use a jigger.
(slang, archaic) To confound; to damn.
(slang, obsolete) To imprison.
To alter or adjust, particularly in ways not originally intended.
To move, send, or drive with a jerk; to jerk; also, to drive or send over with a jerk, as a golf ball.
jirgah
jogger
jogger
noun
(now chiefly Australia) A shoe designed for jogging; a running shoe.
A person who jogs (as exercise).
A printing press operator who removes, jogs, and stacks the sheets or signatures of paper.
A tracksuit.
The trousers of a tracksuit.
verb
(Polari) To entertain.
(Polari) To play.
(Polari) To sing.
jorgan
judger
judger
noun
A judgmental person (contrasted with perceiver as a personality type).
One who, or that which, judges.
jugger
jugger
noun
The Indian falcon (Falco jugger)
juglar
junger
jurgen
juring
rejang
rejang
Proper noun
An ethnolinguistic group in Bengkulu.
The Malayo-Polynesian language spoken by this group.