Publicitad R▼
drool (n.)
1.saliva spilling from the mouth
2.pretentious or silly talk or writing
drool (v. intr.)
1.let saliva drivel from the mouth"The baby drooled"
2.be envious, desirous, eager for, or extremely happy about something"She was salivating over the raise she anticipated"
drool (v.)
1.produce saliva"We salivated when he described the great meal"
Publicidad ▼
Merriam Webster
DroolDrool (?), v. i. [imp. & p. p. Drooled (?); p. pr. & vb. n. Drooling.] [Contr. fr. drivel.] To drivel, or drop saliva; as, the child drools.
His mouth drooling with texts. T. Parker.
drool (n.)
bilge, bilgewater, dribble, drivel, foolishness, rigmarole, slaver, slime, slobber, taradiddle, tarradiddle, tommyrot, tosh, tripe, twaddle, baloney (colloquial, spéc. anglais américain), boloney (colloquial), bosh (spéc. anglais britannique), bull (colloquial), claptrap (colloquial), cobblers (colloquial, British), humbug (British)
drool (v.)
Publicidad ▼
Ver también
drool (v. intr.)
↘ drooling, salivating, slobbering ↗ dribble, drivel, slaver, slime, slobber
drool (v.)
drool (n.)
liquide organique (humain) (fr)[ClasseParExt.]
liquide organique (fr)[Classe]
chose ayant une consistance de mousse (fr)[ClasseParExt.]
escargot (fr)[DomainDescrip.]
drool (n.)
plaisanterie parlée (fr)[Classe]
propos, ce qu'on dit (paroles ou écrits) (fr)[Classe]
affaire sans importance (fr)[Classe]
chose insignifiante (fr)[ClasseParExt.]
crudity; grossness; vulgarity; platitude; cliche; banality; commonplace; bromide[Classe]
parole sotte (fr)[Classe]
idée sotte, idiote, stupide (fr)[Classe]
pleasantry; joke; gag; laugh; jest; jape; lark; crack[Classe]
action sotte ou maladroite (fr)[Classe]
drool (v.)
saliver (fr)[ClasseHyper.]
act involuntarily, act reflexively[Hyper.]
saliva, spit, spittle - salivation[Dérivé]
drool (v. intr.)
projeter salive, mucosités de la bouche (fr)[Classe]
saliver (fr)[Classe]
Wikipedia - ver también
Contenido de sensagent
computado en 0,421s