different between teat vs teatless
teat
English
Etymology
From Middle English tete, from Old French tete (“teat”) (compare French tette), from Frankish *titta, from Proto-Germanic *titt- (“teat; nipple; breast”), ultimately of expressive origin. Doublet of tit, which is inherited.
It displaced Old English titt, which survives as tit. Confer Dutch tiet and German Zitze (“teat”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ti?t/
- Rhymes: -i?t
Noun
teat (plural teats)
- (anatomy) The projection of a mammary gland from which, on female mammals, milk is secreted.
- Synonyms: tit (now vulgar), pap, nipple, dug
- Something resembling a teat, such as a small protuberance or nozzle.
- An artificial nipple used for bottle-feeding infants.
Quotations
Translations
See also
- breast, mammary gland, tit, udder
Anagrams
- Etta, Tate, Teta, aett, tate
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teatless
English
Etymology
teat +? -less
Adjective
teatless (not comparable)
- Without a teat.
- a teatless rubber condom
Anagrams
- leastest, stealest, tsatlees
teatless From the web:
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