Associations to the word «Plump»
Noun
- Collar
- Maid
- Shirt
- Wrist
- Bake
- Beard
- Cot
- Boil
- Hand
- Baby
- Duck
- Mattress
- Feeding
- Arm
- Mustache
- Stout
- Butter
- Spice
- Susie
- Paste
- Hardy
- Wrinkle
- Moustache
- Chuckle
- Greenberg
- Frown
- Knee
- Apron
- Lap
- Whisker
- Cupid
- Jameson
- Lace
- Lean
- Bed
- Fair
- Fifty
- Pigeon
- Bright
- Shawl
- Cling
- Petticoat
- Lass
- Calf
- Dangling
- Matron
- Snout
- Niagara
- Milk
- Blonde
- Teen
- Fowl
- Forefinger
- Sugar
- Oliver
- Hip
- Braid
- Salt
- Waist
Adjective
Wiktionary
PLUMP, verb. (intransitive) To grow plump; to swell out.
PLUMP, verb. (intransitive) To drop or fall suddenly or heavily, all at once.
PLUMP, verb. (transitive) To make plump; to fill (out) or support; often with up.
PLUMP, verb. (transitive) To cast or let drop all at once, suddenly and heavily.
PLUMP, verb. (intransitive) To give a plumper (kind of vote).
PLUMP, verb. (transitive) To give (a vote), as a plumper.
PLUMP, verb. (used with for) To favor or decide in favor of something.
PLUMP, adjective. Having a full and rounded shape; chubby, somewhat overweight.
PLUMP, adjective. Fat.
PLUMP, adjective. (dated) Sudden and without reservation; blunt; direct; downright.
PLUMP, adverb. Directly; suddenly; perpendicularly.
PLUMP, noun. (obsolete) A knot or cluster; a group; a crowd.
PLUMP DOWN, verb. (intransitive) To sit down heavily onto a seat.
PLUMP UP, verb. To shake or arrange (a pillow etc) so as to be fatter or more evenly distributed
PLUMP UP, verb. To make plumper
Dictionary definition
PLUMP, noun. The sound of a sudden heavy fall.
PLUMP, verb. Drop sharply; "The stock market plummeted".
PLUMP, verb. Set (something or oneself) down with or as if with a noise; "He planked the money on the table"; "He planked himself into the sofa".
PLUMP, verb. Make fat or plump; "We will plump out that poor starving child".
PLUMP, verb. Give support (to) or make a choice (of) one out of a group or number; "I plumped for the losing candidates".
PLUMP, adverb. Straight down especially heavily or abruptly; "the anchor fell plump into the sea"; "we dropped the rock plump into the water".
PLUMP, adjective. Sufficiently fat so as to have a pleasing fullness of figure; "a chubby child"; "pleasingly plump";.
Wise words
Wisdom does not show itself so much in precept as in life -
in firmness of mind and a mastery of appetite. It teaches us
to do, as well as talk, and to make our words and actions
all of a color.