[うらなり, uranari] (n) (1) (See 本生り) fruit grown near the tip of the vine (hence stunted and unripe); (2) weak-looking fellow; pale-faced man; pasty-faced man; pallid man [Add to Longdo]
Result from Foreign Dictionaries (3 entries found)
From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:
Pasty \Pas"ty\, a.
Like paste, as in color, softness, stickness. "A pasty
complexion." --G. Eliot.
[1913 Webster]
From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:
Pasty \Pas"ty\, n.; pl. {Pasties}. [OF. past['e], F. p[^a]t['e].
See {Paste}, and cf. {Patty}.]
A pie consisting usually of meat wholly surrounded with a
crust made of a sheet of paste, and often baked without a
dish; a meat pie. "If ye pinch me like a pasty." --Shak.
"Apple pasties." --Dickens.
[1913 Webster]
A large pasty baked in a pewter platter. --Sir W.
Scott.
[1913 Webster]
From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:
pasty
adj 1: resembling paste in color; pallid; "he looked pasty and
red-eyed"; "a complexion that had been pastelike was now
chalky white" [syn: {pasty}, {pastelike}]
2: having the sticky properties of an adhesive [syn: {gluey},
{glutinous}, {gummy}, {mucilaginous}, {pasty}, {sticky},
{viscid}, {viscous}]
n 1: small meat pie or turnover
2: (usually used in the plural) one of a pair of adhesive
patches worn to cover the nipples of exotic dancers and
striptease performers
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