Definition of Stinkard. Meaning of Stinkard. Synonyms of Stinkard

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Stinkard. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Stinkard and, of course, Stinkard synonyms and on the right images related to the word Stinkard.

Definition of Stinkard

Stinkard
Stinkard Stink"ard, n. 1. A mean, stinking, paltry fellow. --B. Jonson. 2. (Zo["o]l.) The teledu of the East Indies. It emits a disagreeable odor.
stinkard
Teledu Tel"e*du, n. (Zo["o]l.) An East Indian carnivore (Mydaus meliceps) allied to the badger, and noted for the very offensive odor that it emits, somewhat resembling that of a skunk. It is a native of the high mountains of Java and Sumatra, and has long, silky fur. Called also stinking badger, and stinkard.

Meaning of Stinkard from wikipedia

- Pliny, Book IX, Ch. 30 (though he only used the general nickname "ozaena" 'stinkard' for the octopus kind). In 1802, the French malacologist Pierre Denys de...
- alowd, laugh alowd, and play the Antickes, that all the garlicke mouthd stinkards may cry out, Away with the fool." The expression appeared in Jonathan...
- only a large bay in lake Huron. It is called by others, the lake of the stinkards, not because it is salt like the water of the Sea—which the Savages call...
- been required to marry only members of the lowest commoner class, called Stinkards or commoners. The Natchez descent system has received a great deal of...
- tightly. The groundlings were commoners who were also referred to as stinkards or penny-stinkers. The name groundlings comes from a line in Hamlet, first...
- Suns" (Natchez: ʔuwahʃiːɫ) and a commoner class called in French "the Stinkards" (Natchez: miʃmiʃkipih). Between 1699 and 1702, the Natchez received the...