The characteristic of having or using words with many syllables; wordiness or prolixity.
/ˌpɒlpɪˌsɪləˈbɪkɪtɪ/
extremely hot, often to the point of causing pain or damage through heat. It can also refer to something that is intensely fiery, irritable, or sharp in language.
/ˈสงค์.รี.โน/
1. verb: to breathe out sharply with a sizzling sound, often caused by anxiety, anger, or impatience. 2. noun: the sharp, sizzling sound made by the escape of a gas or steam through a narrow aperture; often used to describe sound made by snakes or other animals.
/ˈhɪsɪŋ/
A word used to describe something that stimulates the sense of touch in a way that produces laughter or a urge to laugh when touched, usually described as a tingling, light, irritant touch.
/ˈtɪkdli/
A plural term referring to the slender processes or appendages that arise from the sides of the head in certain insects, typically derivatives of the antennae or antenniform appendages found in some arachnids and insects, such as certain mites and springtails. These are thread-like sensory organs that function for tactile or chemosensory purposes.
/ɡleɪˈbɛl.iə/
A unit of computing speed equal to one septillion (10^21) floating-point operations per second. It is used to measure the processing power of high-performance computers.
/ˈzɛtəfloʊp/
A term used in science to describe a group of protists characterized by the presence of a single flagellum and a mastigophoran shape, often found in marine environments.
/daɪˌnoʊmæstɪˈɡoʊtz/
Relating to or denoting an area on the surface of the brain that is found between the parietal and insular lobes, typically referring to the parietoinsular cortex or gyrus. It is part of the parietal lobe and often involved in processing sensory information related to touch, spatial navigation, and the integration of sensory and motor information.
:/pəˈrɪ.ʃəʊ.in.sə.lə/
A ring that surrounds a well for decorative or practical purposes, such as supporting a pump or actuating a sluice gate to control water flow.
/weɪlˈrɪŋ/