panicle |
an irregularly branching cluster of flowers. |
panic-stricken |
overcome by panic; unable to act because of fear; terrified. |
panjandrum |
a pompous or pretentious official. |
pannier |
a large basket, often carried on a person's back, or as one of a pair carried by a pack animal. |
panocha |
a coarse sugar made in Mexico. [2 definitions] |
panoply |
an impressive covering or array of things. [2 definitions] |
panorama |
a full, wide view of an extensive area. [3 definitions] |
panoramic |
allowing or presenting a wide unbroken view of landscape and the like. |
panpipe |
a primitive musical instrument made of a series of reeds or pipes of graduated lengths bound together, that is played by blowing across the open uppermost ends. |
pansophism |
a claim or pretension to universal wisdom or knowledge. |
pansy |
a garden plant, related to the violet, that has flat, rounded, velvety flowers of various intense colors, or the flower of this plant. |
pant |
to breathe in rapid short gasps, as after hard exercise. [5 definitions] |
Pantagruel |
in the sixteenth-century French satire Gargantua and Pantagruel by Rabelais, a giant, good-natured, drunken jokester. |
pantalets |
long women's drawers with ruffles along the lower edge of each leg. |
pantaloons |
men's tightfitting trousers secured by straps under the insteps, worn esp. in the nineteenth century. |
pantheism |
the religious or philosophical doctrine that God is in all things and all things are part of God. |
pantheon |
a temple dedicated to all of a people's gods. [4 definitions] |
panther |
a leopard, esp. a black one with no spots. [2 definitions] |
panties |
brief underpants for women or children. |
pantile |
a curved roofing tile laid so the down curve of one tile overlaps with the up curve of the one beside it. |
panto- |
all. |