booby

listen to the pronunciation of booby
Englisch - Englisch
a woman’s breast

At ten o’clock she was lying on the divan with her boobies in her hands. — Henry Miller, Tropic of Cancer, 1934.

Any of various large tropical seabirds from the genera Sula and Papasula in the gannet family Sulidae, traditionally considered to be stupid

At which time, ſome Boobyes, weary of flight, made our Ship their pearch, an animall ſo ſimple as ſuffers any to take her without feare, as if a ſtupid ſenſe made her careleſſe of danger.

A stupid person
{n} a dull empty fellow, dunce, large bird
{i} stupid person
A dunce; a stupid fellow
dumbbell: an ignorant or foolish person
Any of various tropical seabirds from the genera Sula and Papasula, resembling gannets; rests at night in the rigging of sailing ships from where it is easy to catch
A species of penguin of the antarctic seas
piscator, the red-footed booby
boobies a silly or stupid person. Any of six or seven species of large tropical seabirds (family Sulidae), named for their presumed lack of intelligence. Two common species are wide-ranging in the Atlantic, Pacific, and Indian oceans; another is found in the Pacific from southern California to northern Peru and on the Galápagos Islands. The booby has a long bill, cigar-shaped body, and long, narrow, angular wings. It flies high above the ocean looking for schools of fish and squid, which it snatches in a vertical dive. Boobies vary in length from 25 to 35 in. (65-85 cm). They nest in colonies but are territorial
a woman's breast
an ignorant or foolish person
The name is also sometimes applied to other species of gannets; as, S
Having the characteristics of a booby; stupid
sula related to the common gannet, and found in the West Indies, nesting on the bare rocks
small tropical gannet having a bright bill or bright feet or both
It is so called on account of its apparent stupidity
A swimming bird Sula fiber or S
booby prize
A prize or status, often unwelcome, awarded as a joke or disincentive to the loser of a contest or for poor performance

At the end of the conference, they awarded him with a rubber chicken as a booby prize for complaining the loudest.

booby prizes
plural form of booby prize
booby trap
An antipersonnel device deliberately hidden or disguised as a harmless object
booby trap
An unforeseen source of danger; a pitfall
booby traps
plural form of booby trap
booby-hatch
a small hatchway in the deck of a ship
booby-hatch
a lunatic asylum or similar institution
booby-trap
To set up with booby traps; to plant a booby trap on
booby-trap
Alternative spelling of booby trap
booby-trapped
having a hidden booby trap
booby-trapped
Simple past tense and past participle of boobytrap
booby hatch
{i} cover for a small hatchway on a ship's deck (Nautical); (Offensive term) insane asylum, hospital for the mentally ill; (Slang) jail
booby hatch
a mental hospital
booby prize
The booby prize is a prize given as a joke to the person who comes last in a competition. a prize given as a joke to the person who is last in a competition
booby prize
{i} prize given to the person who finishes last in a competition, loser's consolation prize
booby prize
a prize given to one who finishes last in a contest
booby trap
an explosive mine hidden underground; explodes when stepped on or driven over
booby trap
{i} scheme or device for tricking a person unawares, hidden trap; set down a trap
booby trap
an unforeseen or unexpected or surprising difficulty
booby trapped
{s} sabotaged, set up to explode
booby-trap
A booby-trap is something such as a bomb which is hidden or disguised and which causes death or injury when it is touched. Police were checking the area for booby traps
booby-trap
If something is booby-trapped, a booby-trap is placed in it or on it. fears that the area may have been booby trapped His booby-trapped car exploded
boobies
plural form of boobie
boobies
plural form of booby
Boobies
(Argo) gazongas
boobies
Plural of booby
booby

    Silbentrennung

    boo·by

    Türkische aussprache

    bubi

    Synonyme

    sulid

    Aussprache

    /ˈbo͞obē/ /ˈbuːbiː/

    Etymologie

    [ 'bü-bE ] (noun.) circa 1603. 17th Century. Spanish bobo, from Latin balbus ‘stammering’
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