Tucker-out
verb (used with object), Informal.
1.
to weary; tire; exhaust (often followed by out):
The game tuckered him out.
noun
1.
a person or thing that tucks
2.
a detachable yoke of lace, linen, etc, often white, worn over the breast, as of a low-cut dress
3.
an attachment on a sewing machine used for making tucks at regular intervals
4.
(Austral & NZ, old-fashioned) an informal word for food
verb
1.
(informal, mainly US & Canadian) (transitive; often passive) usually foll by out. to weary or tire completely
tuchis
see: best bib and tucker
Read Also:
- Tucket
noun 1. a trumpet fanfare. noun 1. (archaic) a flourish on a trumpet
- Tuck-point
verb (used with object) 1. to finish (masonry) with tuck pointing.
- Tuck-pointing
verb (used with object) 1. to finish (masonry) with tuck pointing. tuck pointing noun, Masonry. 1. pointing that has an ornamental fillet of putty, lime, or chalk projecting from the mortar joint.
- Tuck-shop
noun, British. 1. a shop where pastry, candy, or the like is sold.
- Tucotuco
noun, plural tuco-tucos. 1. any of several burrowing rodents of the genus Ctenomys, of South America, resembling the pocket gopher. noun 1. any of various colonial burrowing South American hystricomorph rodents of the genus Ctenomys, having long-clawed feet and a stocky body: family Ctenomyidae
