"Hoppestere" is a word in ENGLISH
An unexplained epithet used by Chaucer in reference to
ships. By some it is defined as \"dancing (on the wave)\"; by others as
\"opposing,\" \"warlike.\"
The rain spun in the yellow arc lights over the café parking lot. It was empty inside, except for a fat Negro woman whom I could see through the service window in the kitchen, and a pretty, redheaded waitress in her early twenties, dressed in a pink uniform with her hair tied up on her freckled neck. She was obviously tired, but she was polite and smiled at me when she took my order, and I felt a sense of guilt, almost shame, at my susceptibility and easy fondness for a young woman's smile. Because if you're forty-nine and unmarried or a widower or if you've simply chosen to live alone, you're easily flattered by a young woman's seeming attention to you, and you forget that it is often simply a deference to your age.
WORD SUGGESTIONS
How did Gertie Gorilla win the beauty contest?She was the beast of the show!
kulbà a {1} provoking a feeling of fear at s.t. impending. {2} startling, provoking a pang of fear suddenly. v …
Read the complete definitionpántag - To explain, clear up, understand. Sádto ánay walâ gid mapantagí ang íya sinâ nga kahálit. In former days …
Read the complete definitionGoverned by rule or rules; steady or uniform in course, practice, or occurence; not subject to unexplained or irrational variation; …
Read the complete definitionA thing not discovered; what is unknown or unexplained; a mystery.
Read the complete definitionAn unexplained word occurring in Chaucer, meaning, perhaps, an aromatic sweetmeat for sweetening the breath.
Read the complete definition