释义
[ pouch ] SHOW IPA
/ paʊtʃ / PHONETIC RESPELLING
SEE SYNONYMS FOR pouch ON THESAURUS.COM
noun a bag, sack, or similar receptacle, especially one for small articles or quantities: a tobacco pouch.
a small moneybag.
a bag for carrying mail.
a bag or case of leather, used by soldiers to carry ammunition.
something shaped like or resembling a bag or pocket.
Chiefly Scot. a pocket in a garment.
a baggy fold of flesh under the eye.
Anatomy , Zoology . a baglike or pocketlike part; a sac or cyst, as the sac beneath the bill of pelicans, the saclike dilation of the cheeks of gophers, or the receptacle for the young of marsupials.
Botany . a baglike cavity.
SEE MORE SEE LESS verb (used with object) to put into or enclose in a pouch, bag, or pocket; pocket.
to arrange in the form of a pouch.
(of a fish or bird) to swallow.
SEE MORE SEE LESS verb (used without object) to form a pouch or a cavity resembling a pouch.
Origin of pouch 1350–1400; Middle English pouche <Anglo-French, variant of Old French poche; also poke, poque bag. See poke2
Words nearby pouch pottymouth, potus, pot-valiant, potwalloper, Potyomkin, pouch , pouched, pouched rat, pouchy, poudrage, poudrette
Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020
Example sentences from the Web for pouch Stuffed into the pouch on the back of the seat in front of me is the local newspaper.
Our Trip to The Climate War's Ground Zero | Darren Aronofsky| September 19, 2014| DAILY BEAST
The other daughter had been saved from harm when a notebook with a pouch of pens stopped a bullet.
The First Modern School Shooter Feels Responsible for the Rest | Michael Daly| May 30, 2014| DAILY BEAST
In that same picture, in a pouch in the back of the front seat, there is a magazine: a copy of Newsweek.
The Night Princess Diana Died | Christopher Dickey| August 31, 2013| DAILY BEAST
A $3 pouch of Bugler ends up retailing inside for about $600—a 20,000% markup.
With Cigarettes Banned In Most Prisons, Gangs Shift From Drugs To Smokes | Seth Ferranti| June 2, 2013| DAILY BEAST
Due to its shape, the pouch fills up so quickly that patients feel full after eating even the smallest portions of food.
Chris Christie’s Weight Loss: The Lap-Band Procedure Explained | Lizzie Crocker| May 8, 2013| DAILY BEAST
When the young has attained a certain size, the mother removes it from the pouch , but takes it in from time to time to suckle it.
The Cambridge Natural History, Vol X., Mammalia | Frank Evers Beddard
Colonel Nordsen removed tobacco from a pouch , stuffed his pipe, lit up.
Next Door, Next World | Robert Donald Locke
Conall, it's long since my knife is rusting in my pouch waiting for thy tender flesh.'
Fairy Tales; Their Origin and Meaning | John Thackray Bunce
He therefore was determined to kill two birds with one stone, and while North have some keys made to fit the company's pouch .
The Expressman and the Detective | Allan Pinkerton
Next he removed two pistols and a second pouch of the sort used for powder and shot.
The Black Buccaneer | Stephen W. Meader
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British Dictionary definitions for pouch noun a small flexible baglike container a tobacco pouch
a saclike structure in any of various animals, such as the abdominal receptacle marsupium in marsupials or the cheek fold in rodents
anatomy any sac, pocket, or pouchlike cavity or space in an organ or part
another word for mailbag
SEE MORE SEE LESS verb (tr) to place in or as if in a pouch
to arrange or become arranged in a pouchlike form
(tr) (of certain birds and fishes) to swallow
SEE MORE SEE LESS
Derived forms of pouch pouchy , adjective Word Origin for pouch C14: from Old Norman French pouche, from Old French poche bag; see poke ²
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Words related to pouch pocket, bag, purse, sac, poke, receptacle, sack
Medical definitions for pouch n. A pocketlike space in the body.
The American Heritage® Stedman's Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.