portemonnaie |
money-carrier (French); a small pocketbook or purse. |
portend |
to serve as a sign or warning of; bode. [2 definitions] |
portent |
a sign of something important, and often disastrous, that is about to occur; omen. [2 definitions] |
portentous |
being or like a portent. [3 definitions] |
porter1 |
one who carries luggage for travelers at a station or hotel. [2 definitions] |
porter2 |
a dark malt ale whose color is achieved by drying the malt at a high temperature. |
porterhouse |
a beefsteak cut from the back end of the short loin. |
portfolio |
a portable case for transporting unbound papers or other printed material. [4 definitions] |
porthole |
a small opening or window in the side of a ship or airplane. [2 definitions] |
portico |
a roof supported by columns, serving as a covered walkway or building entrance. |
portière |
a heavy or decorative curtain hung in a doorway usu. in place of a door. |
portion |
a part of a whole. [4 definitions] |
portionless |
combined form of portion. |
Portland cement |
(sometimes l.c.) a cement made by heating limestone with clay and hardening under water. |
Port Louis |
the seaport capital of Mauritius. |
portly |
rather fat; stout. |
portmanteau |
a stiff, usu. leather suitcase that opens into two hinged parts. |
portmanteau word |
a word formed by combining the sounds and meanings of two other words, such as "smog" from "smoke" and "fog". |
Port Moresby |
the seaport capital of Papua New Guinea. |
port of call |
a port where a ship regularly docks during the course of a longer voyage in order to load and unload passengers and cargo, make repairs, or the like. |
port of entry |
a place where travelers or goods may enter or leave a country under the supervision of customs officials. |