leg)

  • 61leg —   Wāwae; kū auwāwae (rare). See drumstick.    ♦ Leg of ham, ūhā hame.    ♦ Leg of mutton, ūhā hipa.    ♦ Leg of mutton sleeve, lima ūhā hipa.    ♦ Lobster leg, wa awa a.    ♦ Upper leg of crab, wāwae; hē (rare) …

    English-Hawaiian dictionary

  • 62LEG — Die Abkürzung LEG steht für: die Landesentwicklungsgesellschaft, ehemalige landeseigene Betriebe den Bahnhof Eilenburg die Leipziger Eisenbahnverkehrsgesellschaft mbH (früher ASP Schienenfahrzeugdienst Verwaltungs GmbH) Leg bezeichnet: im… …

    Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 63legʷh- — Light, having little weight. Derivatives include levity, carnival, elevate, leprechaun, and lung. 1. Suffixed form *legʷh t . a. light2, from Old English līht, lēoht, light; …

    Universalium

  • 64leg — Synonyms and related words: ambulate, ankle, appendage, arm, assist, bayonet legs, boost, bough, bowlegs, branch, break, breast, broken circuit, calf, chicken foot, circuit, circuital field, circumambulate, closed circuit, cnemis, complete… …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 65leg — [13] Shank was the word used in Old English for ‘leg’. Not until the late 13th was leg acquired, from Old Norse leggr. It goes back to a prehistoric Germanic *lagjaz, which may ultimately come from a source that meant ‘bend’. No other Germanic… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 66leg — [13] Shank was the word used in Old English for ‘leg’. Not until the late 13th was leg acquired, from Old Norse leggr. It goes back to a prehistoric Germanic *lagjaz, which may ultimately come from a source that meant ‘bend’. No other Germanic… …

    Word origins

  • 67leg up — I. noun : leg 8 II. transitive verb : condition 3 e a colt … properly hardened and legged up F.A.Wrensch * * * help to mount a horse or high object give me a leg up over the wall ■ help to improve …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 68leg — See: ON ONE S LAST LEGS, PULL ONE S LEG, SHAKE A LEG, TAIL BETWEEN ONE S LEGS …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 69leg — See: ON ONE S LAST LEGS, PULL ONE S LEG, SHAKE A LEG, TAIL BETWEEN ONE S LEGS …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 70leg — I. noun Etymology: Middle English, from Old Norse leggr Date: 14th century 1. a limb of an animal used especially for supporting the body and for walking: as a. (1) one of the paired vertebrate limbs that in bipeds extend from the top of the… …

    New Collegiate Dictionary