spongiform |
resembling a sponge in appearance or texture. |
spongy |
resembling a sponge in lightness, porosity, absorbency, or esp. resiliency. |
sponson |
a structure projecting from the side of a ship or boat, esp. a gun platform, or an air chamber on the gunwale of a canoe that prevents capsizing. [2 definitions] |
sponsor |
a person or group who assumes responsibility for someone or something. [5 definitions] |
spontaneity |
an unforced, unplanned quality of behavior, or a willingness to behave in a way that is not thought out beforehand. [2 definitions] |
spontaneous |
happening freely or done by impulse; not forced. [3 definitions] |
spontaneous combustion |
the ignition of a substance or material, such as oily cloths or wet hay, caused by the rapid increase of heat from chemical reactions in the substance. |
spontaneous generation |
the theory that living organisms can be created entirely from inanimate matter; abiogenesis. |
spoof |
a humorous imitation; good-natured mocking; lampoon. [5 definitions] |
spook |
(informal) a ghost; phantom. [4 definitions] |
spooky |
eerie and mysterious; weirdly disturbing. |
spool |
a cylindrical object, usu. with a rim on each end, on which thread, tape, wire, photographic film, or the like is wound. [3 definitions] |
spoon |
a utensil with a small shallow bowl at the end of a handle, used for eating, stirring, serving, or measuring. [4 definitions] |
spoonbill |
any of several large wading birds that have a long, flat, spoon-shaped bill. [2 definitions] |
spoondrift |
spindrift. |
spoonerism |
a usu. unintentional switching of the initial sounds of two or more words, such as "sped rot" for "red spot". |
spoon-fed |
fed by a spoon, esp. with liquid or semiliquid food. [2 definitions] |
spoon-feed |
to feed with a spoon, esp. with liquid or semiliquid food. [2 definitions] |
spoonful |
the amount a spoon can hold. |
spoor |
the track, trail, or droppings of a wild animal. |
sporadic |
occurring irregularly or in a thinly scattered manner in time or space. |