• Composting Toilet

    Composting toilet is a toilet that do not use any water. This type of toilet is a dry toilet. The toilet processes the human excreta by using harsh chemicals.

  • Puir

    adjective, Scot. 1. poor. 2. pure. adjective 1. a Scot word for poor

  • Puirtith

    noun 1. (Scot) poverty

  • Puisne

    adjective 1. Law. younger; inferior in rank; junior, as in appointment. noun 2. an associate judge as distinguished from a chief justice. adjective 1. (esp of a subordinate judge) of lower rank

  • Puissance

    noun, Literary. 1. power, might, or force. noun 1. a competition in showjumping that tests a horse’s ability to jump a limited number of large obstacles 2. (archaic or poetic) power

  • Husky

    [huhs-kee] /ˈhʌs ki/ adjective, huskier, huskiest. 1. big and strong; burly. 2. (of the voice) having a semiwhispered vocal tone; somewhat hoarse, as when speaking with a cold or from grief or passion. 3. like, covered with, or full of . 4. made in a size meant for the larger or heavier than average boy: […]

  • Batiste

    a fine, often sheer fabric, constructed in either a plain or figured weave and made of any of various natural or synthetic fibers. Contemporary Examples batiste is from New Orleans, and his heritage informs both his music and his performance style. Jon Batiste, a Thrilling Jazz Pianist Whose First Goal Is to Entertain Howard Wolfson […]

  • Primacy

    noun, plural primacies for 2, 3. 1. the state of being first in order, rank, importance, etc. 2. Also called primateship. English Ecclesiastics. the office, rank, or dignity of a primate. 3. Roman Catholic Church. the jurisdiction of a bishop, as a patriarch, over other bishoprics, or the supreme jurisdiction of the pope as supreme […]

  • Break-line

    noun Examples Historical Examples Freckles Gene Stratton-Porter

  • From the git-go

    adverb phrase From the very beginning: It was his bust from the git-go/ Right from the get-go he came out smoking. It all went down in milliseconds [fr black; perhaps based on from the word go, found by 1883]