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List of synonyms from "dead low tide" to synonyms from "dead-tired"


Discover all the synonyms available for the terms dead low tide, dead low water, dead man, dead set on, dead on one's feet and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.

Definition of the day : « dead meat »

  • As in sitting duck : noun easy target
Example sentences :
  • Where would the poor make a profit out of their dead meat without me?
  • Extract from : « Seven Short Plays » by Lady Gregory
  • Altogether, since the importation began, a million and a quarter pounds of dead meat have been sold in Glasgow.
  • Extract from : « Cooley's Practical Receipts, Volume II » by Arnold Cooley
  • As to dead meat, the first sale was held on the 5th of June, when 100 carcases of beef and 72 of mutton were disposed of.
  • Extract from : « Cooley's Practical Receipts, Volume II » by Arnold Cooley
  • The sky pin-pricked with stars, the air redolent with the mushy flavour of dead meat.
  • Extract from : « Gladiator » by Philip Wylie
  • The two schooners clearing for Halifax were loaded with "dead meat," probably intended for the garrison.
  • Extract from : « Every Day Life in the Massachusetts Bay Colony » by George Francis Dow
  • Don't move a hand or a foot until the dog chokes himself to death on the dead meat.
  • Extract from : « Irish Fairy Tales » by James Stephens
  • The destruction of live stock was something more to them than lost property, than dead meat.
  • Extract from : « Our Part in the Great War » by Arthur Gleason
  • Attracted by the effluvia from the dead meat, the bluebottles haunt my laboratory, the windows of which are always open.
  • Extract from : « The Life of the Fly » by J. Henri Fabre
  • Many of them they send alive to London, but they also send an enormous quantity of dead meat.
  • Extract from : « Cattle and Cattle-breeders » by William M'Combie
  • He is one of the greatest senders of dead meat, and he also feeds a large lot of bullocks.
  • Extract from : « Cattle and Cattle-breeders » by William M'Combie