释义 |
tush I. \ˈtəsh\ noun (-es) Etymology: Middle English tusch, from Old English tūsc; akin to Old Frisian tusk tooth, Gothic tunthus — more at tooth : a long pointed tooth : tusk: as a. : a horse's canine b. : a small or dwarfed tusk in an Indian elephant II. interjection Etymology: Middle English tussch — used to express disdain, contempt or reproach < tush; these are trifles, and mere old wives' tales — Christopher Marlowe > III. \ˈtu̇sh\ noun or tush·in \-shə̇n\ (plural tush or tushes or tushin or tushins) Usage: usually capitalized : a member of a Georgian people north of Tiflis IV. \ˈtu̇sh\ noun (-es) Etymology: perhaps modification of Yiddish tokhes, from Hebrew taḥath under, beneath slang : buttocks |