Greek | |
1. n. An inhabitant, resident, or person of descent from Greece. | |
2. n. The language of the Greek people, spoken in Greece, Cyprus and other Greek communities. | |
3. n. The writing system used in writing the Greek language. | |
4. n. Unintelligible speech or text, such as foreign speech or text, or regarding subjects the listener is not familiar with, such as mathematics or technical jargon; or statements that the listener does no | |
5. n. (US) A member of a college fraternity or sorority, which are commonly characterised by being named after Greek letters. (See also Greek system). | |
Was Joe a Greek in college? | |
6. n. (archaic) A cunning rogue; a merry fellow. | |
7. n. (slang) Anal sex. | |
8. n. Greek cuisine; traditional Greek food. | |
9. n. (finance, mostly, in the plural) One of the Greeks, measures of derivative price sensitivity. | |
10. adj. Of or relating to Greece, the Greek people, or the Greek language. | |
11. adj. (US) Of or pertaining to a fraternity or sorority. | |
12. adj. Unintelligible, especially regarding foreign speech or text, or regarding subjects the speaker is not familiar with, such as mathematics or technical jargon. | |
13. n. alternative case form of Greek nonsense writing or talk; gibberish. | |
14. n. alternative case form of Greek anal sex. | |
15. v. (transitive, computing) To display a placeholder (instead of text), especially to optimize speed in displaying text that would be too small to read. | |
16. v. (transitive, computing) To fill a template with nonsense text (particularly the Lorem ipsum), so that form can be focused on instead of content. | |