Associations to the word «Jock»
Noun
- Ewing
- Stein
- Laird
- Ellie
- Sutherland
- Digger
- Chloe
- Strap
- Stirrup
- Hobbs
- Terrier
- Norbert
- Bully
- Collingwood
- Groin
- Scottish
- Mote
- Whitney
- Scot
- Clique
- Wallace
- Jam
- Lettering
- Slater
- Wes
- Rutherford
- Jockey
- Mediator
- Boyfriend
- Heinz
- Stern
- Ferguson
- Fighter
- Goth
- Guinness
- Popular
- Calvert
- Gibbons
- Macdonald
- Blanchard
- Tam
- Elliot
- Blaine
- Livingston
- Tt
- Blackwood
- Barnes
- Johnstone
- Celtic
- Bobby
- Wat
- Vertigo
- Cunningham
- Trojan
- Kennel
- Tramp
- Caleb
- Stereotype
- Chad
- Campbell
- Denton
- Lac
- Mcleod
- Liam
- Griffiths
- Sore
- Dj
- Atkinson
- Gym
- Lim
- Iain
- Dubois
- Punk
- Pamela
- Sandy
- Boyle
- Else
- Wad
- Irvine
- Mckay
- Cameron
- Trevor
- Maitland
- Paterson
- Footballer
- Graeme
- Platter
Adverb
Wiktionary
JOCK, noun. (slang) (archaic) A common man.
JOCK, noun. (British) (slang) (pejorative) A Scotsman.
JOCK, noun. (slang) (rare) (dated) The penis.
JOCK, noun. An athletic supporter worn by men to support the genitals especially during sports, a jockstrap.
JOCK, noun. (US) (slang) A young male athlete (through college age).
JOCK, noun. (US) (slang) (pejorative) An enthusiastic athlete or sports fan, especially one with few other interests. A slow-witted person of large size and great physical strength. A pretty boy that shows off in sport.
JOCK, noun. (US) (slang) (computing) A specialist computer programmer
JOCK, verb. (slang) to masturbate
JOCK, verb. (slang) to humiliate
JOCK, verb. (slang) to steal
JOCK, proper noun. A nickname.
JOCK, noun. (UK) (slang) a Scot
JOCK ITCH, noun. A fungal infection, tinea cruris, of the groin region, usually due to the fungus Trichophyton rubrum, but also Candida albicans, Trichophyton mentagrophytes, Epidermophyton floccosum, and others.
JOCK STRAP, noun. Athletic supporter.
JOCK STRAPS, noun. Plural of jock strap
Dictionary definition
JOCK, noun. A person trained to compete in sports.
JOCK, noun. A support for the genitals worn by men engaging in strenuous exercise.
Wise words
Men govern nothing with more difficulty than their tongues,
and can moderate their desires more than their words.