job lot |
a large quantity of assorted goods, usu. sold or handled as a single transaction. [2 definitions] |
Job's-tears |
(used with a sing. verb) an annual tropical grass that bears hard, beadlike seeds containing edible grains. |
jock1 |
(informal) someone employed to ride horses in races; jockey. |
jock2 |
a jockstrap. [2 definitions] |
jockey |
someone employed to ride horses in races. [6 definitions] |
jockstrap |
an elastic strap with a pouch to support a male's genitals during athletic activities; athletic supporter. |
jocose |
inclined to joke; jovial; merry. [2 definitions] |
jocular |
jovial or inclined to joke; merry. [2 definitions] |
jocund |
merry or cheerful in manner or appearance; jovial. |
jodhpurs |
trousers that are baggy at the hips but tight below the knees, often worn for riding horses. |
joey |
the young of a kangaroo. |
jog1 |
to move or jar slightly; nudge. [9 definitions] |
jog2 |
a sudden turn or bend. [3 definitions] |
joggle |
to move back and forth rapidly but gently; shake. [3 definitions] |
jog trot |
a slow, regular, jolting gait, esp. of a horse. |
Johannesburg |
a city in the country of South Africa, and one of the largest cities on the continent of Africa. |
Johannes Kepler |
a German astronomer and mathematician (b.1571--d.1630). |
Johann Goethe |
a German author (b.1749--d.1832). |
Johann Gutenberg |
a German printer considered to be the inventor of the system of printing with movable type (b.1400?--d.1468?). |
Johann Sebastian Bach |
a German composer and organist (b.1685--d.1750). |
John |
according to the New Testament, one of the twelve Apostles of Jesus Christ, one of the four evangelists, and the probable author of the fourth Gospel, the Book of Revelation, and three Epistles. [5 definitions] |