Associations to the word «Victualling»
Noun
- Wine
- Broth
- Ammunition
- Quixote
- Sick
- Lev
- Dressing
- Clothes
- Boil
- Dish
- Ration
- Parlour
- Crop
- Expense
- Merchant
- Cheese
- Vinegar
- Abode
- Beggar
- Spoon
- Shore
- Salvage
- Mariner
- Hut
- Wage
- Folk
- Belly
- Month
- Poultry
- Pot
- Passage
- Salt
- Dinner
- Wasting
- Baggage
- Fed
- Crown
- Flesh
- Merchandise
- Jest
- Habitation
- Liquor
- Difficulty
- Pig
- Labourer
- Savage
- Shilling
- Pound
- Furniture
- Thirst
- Feast
- Famine
- Spaniard
- Flour
- Extremity
- Dem
- Carry
- Nay
- Banquet
- Menace
- Haste
- Pirate
Adjective
Wiktionary
VICTUAL, noun. Food fit for human consumption.
VICTUAL, noun. (archaic) (in the plural) Food supplies; provisions.
VICTUAL, noun. (Scotland) grain of any kind
VICTUAL, verb. (transitive) To provide with food; to provision.
VICTUAL, verb. (intransitive) To lay in food supplies.
VICTUAL, verb. (intransitive) To eat.
Dictionary definition
VICTUAL, noun. Any substance that can be used as food.
VICTUAL, verb. Supply with food; "The population was victualed during the war".
VICTUAL, verb. Lay in provisions; "The vessel victualled before the long voyage".
VICTUAL, verb. Take in nourishment.
Wise words
The chief virtue that language can have is clearness, and
nothing detracts from it so much as the use of unfamiliar
words.