These are the meanings of the letters EMPUJO when you unscramble them.
- Jump (a.)
Nice; exact; matched; fitting; precise.
- Jump (adv.)
Exactly; pat.
- Jump (n.)
A bodice worn instead of stays by women in the 18th century.
- Jump (n.)
A dislocation in a stratum; a fault.
- Jump (n.)
A kind of loose jacket for men.
- Jump (n.)
An abrupt interruption of level in a piece of brickwork or masonry.
- Jump (n.)
An effort; an attempt; a venture.
- Jump (n.)
The act of jumping; a leap; a spring; a bound.
- Jump (n.)
The space traversed by a leap.
- Jump (v. i.)
To coincide; to agree; to accord; to tally; -- followed by with.
- Jump (v. i.)
To move as if by jumping; to bounce; to jolt.
- Jump (v. i.)
To spring free from the ground by the muscular action of the feet and legs; to project one's self through the air; to spring; to bound; to leap.
- Jump (v. t.)
To bore with a jumper.
- Jump (v. t.)
To cause to jump; as, he jumped his horse across the ditch.
- Jump (v. t.)
To expose to danger; to risk; to hazard.
- Jump (v. t.)
To join by a butt weld.
- Jump (v. t.)
To pass by a spring or leap; to overleap; as, to jump a stream.
- Jump (v. t.)
To thicken or enlarge by endwise blows; to upset.
- Jupe (n.)
Same as Jupon.
- meou (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Mope (n.)
A dull, spiritless person.
- Mope (v. i.)
To be dull and spiritless.
- Mope (v. t.)
To make spiritless and stupid.
- moue (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Poem (n.)
A composition, not in verse, of which the language is highly imaginative or impassioned; as, a prose poem; the poems of Ossian.
- Poem (n.)
A metrical composition; a composition in verse written in certain measures, whether in blank verse or in rhyme, and characterized by imagination and poetic diction; -- contradistinguished from prose; as, the poems of Homer or of Milton.
- Pome (n.)
A ball of silver or other metal, which is filled with hot water, and used by the priest in cold weather to warm his hands during the service.
- Pome (n.)
A fruit composed of several cartilaginous or bony carpels inclosed in an adherent fleshy mass, which is partly receptacle and partly calyx, as an apple, quince, or pear.
- Pome (n.)
To grow to a head, or form a head in growing.