(Australia, informal) An exclamation of support or approval, usually for a sporting (football) team.
(Australia, informal) Come on.
noun
Archaic form of cairn.
cern
cnsr
corn
corn
noun
(Commonwealth English, but not Australia or New Zealand, uncountable) Any cereal plant (or its grain) that is the main crop or staple of a country or region.
(Jamaica, MLE, slang, firearms, uncountable) bullets, ammunition, charge and discharge of firearms
(Jamaica, slang, uncountable) money.
(US, Canada) Something (e.g. acting, humour, music, or writing) which is deemed old-fashioned or intended to induce emotion.
(US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, uncountable) Maize, a grain crop of the species Zea mays.
(uncountable) A type of granular snow formed by repeated melting and refreezing, often in mountain spring conditions.
(veterinary medicine, pathology, cattle) (countable) skin hyperplasia with underlying fibroma between both digits of cattle.
(veterinary medicine, pathology, equestrianism) (countable) inflammatory disease of horse hoof, at the caudal part of the sole.
A grain or seed, especially of a cereal crop.
A small, hard particle.
A type of callus, usually on the feet or hands.
verb
(Jamaica, MLE, slang) to shoot up with bullets as by a shotgun (corn).
(US, Canada) to granulate; to form a substance into grains
(US, Canada) to preserve using coarse salt, e.g. corned beef
(US, Canada) to provide with corn (typically maize; or, in Scotland, oats) for feed
to render intoxicated
cran
cran
noun
(music) An embellishment played on the lowest note of a chanter of a bagpipe, consisting of a series of grace notes produced by rapid sequential lifting of the fingers of the lower hand.
(obsolete) A measure of herrings, either imprecise or sometimes legally specified. It has sometimes been about 37½ imperial gallons, or 750 herrings on average.
(obsolete, rare, by extension) A barrel made to hold such a measure.
Alternative form of qiran
cren
crin
crin
noun
horsehair fabric
curn
incr
narc
narc
noun
(colloquial, informal) A narcissist.
(informal, colloquial, drugs) A police officer assigned to or engaging in illegal narcotics control.
(informal, colloquial, drugs) Alternative spelling of nark (“spy”)
verb
(informal, colloquial, drugs) Alternative spelling of nark
(underwater diving, slang) To suffer from impaired judgment due to nitrogen narcosis (for example, while scuba diving).