A gentle pat or tap, especially used to express affection or playfulness. It is often used among children and close friends as a nonspecific term of fondness. It can also refer to a character's playful tap in comics or animation.
/bzuːps/
A German surname, or someone of German descent; a place name in various countries; a surname of characters in media, literature, and history.
/ˈʃuluːtz/
A class of immunosuppressive drugs derived from the fungus Tolypocladium inflatum, primarily used to prevent organ rejection in transplant patients and to control autoimmune diseases.
Vize is a rare and obsolete term, primarily used in historical contexts, referring to a kind of visa that was formerly bureaucratic in nature, a clearance or authorization permitting the bearer to travel or remain in a certain country. In modern usage, it has largely been replaced by the term 'visa'.
/vize/
A rare or obsolete word, but can be understood as pressing into, bending or compressing; particularly, a medical term referring to the act of pressing or compressing, as in an anastomosis.
/ˈɑːn.spər.præ.de/
A style of comedic performance, especially in Italian commedia dell'arte, characterized by broad, exaggerated physical and verbal humor, often involving masks and comic situations.
/ˈlæzi/
Austroasiatic is a family of languages spoken across Southeast Asia and parts of South Asia, including Vietnamese, Khmer, and Mon. It is also used to refer to the languages that belong to this family, such as Cham and Malayo-Network languages.
/ɔːs.trəu.əˈsɪ.tə.tɪk/
Playful, simulated combat, often used for fun or exercise rather than with serious intent to hurt, typically involving exaggerated or controlled blows or attacks between two or more individuals.
/peɪˈfɪt/
Expressing or characterized by the attribution of human emotions or feelings to non-human things or animals. It involves projecting human emotional characteristics onto non-human entities, as if they were capable of experiencing those emotions oneself.
/ˌænθrəpəˈpæθɪkəlili/