Meaning of Duff | Babel Free
dʌfDefinitions
- Acronym of dumb/designated ugly fat friend, an attractive woman's less attractive friend.
- Dough.
- Decaying vegetable matter on the forest floor.
-
The buttocks. US, slang
- A surname.
- A stiff flour pudding, often with dried fruit, boiled in a cloth bag, or steamed.
- Coal dust, especially that left after screening or combined with other small, unsaleable bits of coal.
- A placename
- A village in Saskatchewan, Canada.
- A pudding-style dessert, especially one made with plums or (in the Bahamas) guavas.
- Fine and dry coal in small pieces, usually anthracite.
- An unincorporated community in Indiana, United States.
- A mixture of coal and rock.
- An unincorporated community in Nebraska, United States.
- The bits left in the bottom of the bag after the booty has been consumed, like crumbs.
- An unincorporated community in Tennessee, United States.
- Something spurious or fake; a counterfeit; a worthless thing; a defective thing.
- A male given name.
- An error.
-
A BR class 47, a class of British diesel locomotive. UK, countable, uncountable
Examples
“Later on, all the tinned meat came to an end, likewise the potatoes, and we lived on salt meat, biscuit, and duff; this fare was served out to all the messes on board, and we, I was going to say, saloon-folk, fared no better than the fo'castle hands.”
“The storekeeper had sent them an unbroken case of canned plum pudding, and probably by this time he was wondering what had become of that blanky case of duff.”
“Who bravely stuff Themselves with Duff, May laugh at Doctor's bills.”
“Dessert is as substantial as the main course, and none more so than the absolute favorite, guava duff.”
“They must live on sea food—a deal more of salt beef, pork, beans, and hard tack is than of any thing else, but of the food at sea well as in port it may here be said that it is ample in quantity and good enough anybody, though by no means all strawberry shortcake and cream or plum duff.”
“With Christmas well on its way let's take a look at a modern version of an old favourite dessert more often than not reserved for the day we celebrate the birth of Christ: plum duff. It is just as well Christmas falls during the summer school holidays as a nipper this allowed me to be at my grandmother's home when the true traditional plum duff was made.”
“Forest fires have often been started from wantonness; for the sake of making a big blaze, fires will be carelessly left by guides, or will be smouldering in the duff,* where it will burn for weeks. I have seen the smoke from fires in the duff even after the snow has fallen. * Local term for the vegetable growth covering the forest ground of the Adirondacks. under the spruce trees, the falling needles accumulate to considerable depth, forming the "spruce duff," a peculiar and interesting variety of forest humus.”
“These methods also make it possible for the forest officer to describe and to record his observations in precise terms such as “6% percent duff moisture” rather than in generalities such as “pretty dry duff.””
“Depth of litter and duff under the crown of each tree was measured at a point that appeared to represent average depth. Bulk samples of litter (including duff) were taken under four pinyons and three junipers, and ovendried.”
“1991, "Woody Fuel and Duff Consumption by Prescribed Fire in Northern Idaho Mixed Conifer Logging Slash" from the U.S. Department of Agriculture The moisture content of the deep pockets of rotten wood was much greater than of the litter-derived duff layer.”
“Out under the trees, some rangers had found enough duff and dry wood to start a fire beneath a slanting ridge of slate.”
“The underfooting is mostly duff and sand, through alternating forest and meadow.”
“Their task was to carry out a prescribed burn--a carefully controlled, low-intensity fire that clears duff and deadwood, reducing the risk of a catastrophic wildfire.”
“The great bulk of the coal burnt under our boilers is duff of a very small size, and a mixed coal of duff, peas, and small nuts.”
CEFR level
C2
Mastery
This word is part of the CEFR C2 vocabulary — mastery level.
This word is part of the CEFR C2 vocabulary — mastery level.
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