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A Writer's Dictionary:

nose around Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with N » northerliness ... not be able to believe one's eyes » nose around


nose
noun
    1. The projecting organ above the mouth, with which one smells and breathes.
      Thesaurus: nostrils, nasal passages, olfactory organ, proboscis, beak (slang), snout (slang), schnozzle (US slang).
    2. An animal's snout or muzzle.
    3. The sense of smell.
      Example: He has a good nose
    4. A scent or aroma, esp a wine's bouquet.
    5. The front or projecting part of anything, eg a motor vehicle.
    6. The nose as a symbol of inquisitiveness or interference.
      Example: poke one's nose into something
verb nosed, nosing
    tr & intr
    1. To move carefully forward.
      Example: nosed the car out of the yard
    2. To detect something by smelling.
    3. Said of an animal: to sniff at something or nuzzle it.
Derivative: nosed
adj
    Note: in compounds
    Having a nose of a specified type.
      Example: red-nosed
Derivative: noseless
adj
    Derivative: nosing
    noun
      Idiom: a nose for something
        A faculty for detecting or recognizing something.
          Example: He has a nose for a bargain
      Idiom: by a nose
        By a narrow margin.
          Thesaurus: almost, barely, just.
      Idiom: cut off one's nose to spite one's face
        To act from resentment in a way that can only cause injury to oneself.
      Idiom: get up someone's nose
        colloq
        To annoy them.
      Idiom: keep one's nose clean
        colloq
        To avoid doing anything that might get one into trouble.
      Idiom: look down one's nose at something or someone (turn up one's nose at something or someone)
        colloq
        To show disdain for it or them.
          Thesaurus: scorn, disdain, snub.
      Idiom: nose to tail
        Said of cars: in a slow-moving queue with the front of one almost touching the rear of the one in front.
      Idiom: not see beyond the end of one's nose (further than the end of one's nose)
        Not to see the long-term consequences of one's actions.
      Idiom: on the nose
        Said of bets made in horse-racing: to win only, ie not to come second, etc.
        ( Amer)
        Exactly.
        (ustral)
        colloq
        Unsavoury; offensive.
      Idiom: pay through the nose
        colloq
        To pay an exorbitant price.
          Thesaurus: pay, pay heavily.
      Idiom: put someone's nose out of joint
        colloq
        To affront them.
      Idiom: under one's nose (under one's very nose)
        In full view and very obviously in front of one; close at hand.
          Thesaurus: obvious, visible, in plain sight, at one's fingertips.
      Etymology: Anglo-Saxon nosu.

      Phrasal Verb: nose about or around
        To pry.
      Phrasal Verb: nose something out
        To discover it by prying; to track it down.


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