Join the masses who listen to A Way With Words, the call-in radio show and podcast about words and language.
Catchword for “leg attack”
Catchword: leg attack
Filed Under: ,
Part of Speechn.
The part of speech reflects that used in the full entry, and not necessarily the part of speech as it is used in the quotation below.
Quotation: It is a well known fact that high cholesterol diets lead to atherosclerosis (clogging of arteries) which could lead to stroke (brain attack), gangrene of the legs (leg attack), myocardial infarction (heart attack), hypertension, etc.
Article or Document Title:
“Nigerian Food, High Cholesterol And Your Heart” (URL)
Article, Document, Publication, Web Site:
Usenet: soc.culture.nigeria
Date of Publication:
Aug. 15, 1998
This cite belongs to a full entry for leg attack.
Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.
Recent Catchwords
antihomonuptial adj. (11/30)
cellblock n. (11/30)
cut and shut n. (11/30)
photoporation n. (11/30)
dry powder n. (11/30)
phytocapping n. (11/30)
toe pick n. (11/30)
smokepole n. (11/30)
heavy furniture n. (11/29)
gulch n. (11/24)
hyper-edit n. (11/24)
doga n. (11/24)
hot body n. (11/24)
wovit n. (11/24)
boyat n. (11/23)
KLM n. (11/23)
governist n. (11/23)
wirehouse n. (11/23)
mockolate n. (11/23)
detailer n. (11/23)
 More catchwords...
New Comments
jordan commented on tom-walkers (11/30)
Spc. POG commented on fobbit (11/30)
dallas waxler commented on whimperative (11/29)
C. Sean Holliday commented on may state (11/27)
Suzanne commented on Yankee dime (11/24)
Bink commented on catch a crab (11/21)
Bink commented on hotbox (11/21)
Steve commented on hotbox (11/18)
Dr. Andrew Ruddle commented on midnight drop (11/18)
Kortney commented on shralping (11/16)
Michelle Jerome commented on woo-woo (11/14)
stack commented on robotripping (11/13)
R. Hopkins commented on one-eighty-seven (11/12)
C commented on featherwood (11/11)
mitch commented on catch a crab (11/4)
Subscribe to the RSS feed.Subscribe to the mailing list.Browse the archive.Add to Technorati Favorites. © 1999-2008 by Grant Barrett, Double-Tongued Dictionary, New York City.