INSERT vs TUCK: NOUN
- An image inserted into text.
- Something inserted.
- Something inserted or intended for insertion, as a picture or chart into written material.
- (broadcasting) a local announcement inserted into a network program
- (film) a still picture that is inserted and that interrupts the action of a film
- A folded section placed between the leaves of another publication
- A promotional leaflet inserted into a magazine, newspaper, etc.
- An artifact that is inserted or is to be inserted
- A pinch; a nip. See the quotation under tuck, transitive verb, 7.
- Energy; vigor.
- A beat or tap, especially on a drum.
- Eatables (especially sweets)
- (sports) a bodily position adopted in some sports (such as diving or skiing) in which the knees are bent and the thighs are drawn close to the chest
- A narrow flattened pleat or fold that is stitched in place
- Nautical, that part of a vessel where the after ends of the outside planking come together under the stern.
- A kind of net.
- Eatables; viands; especially, sweets or pastry. Also tucker, in Australia.
- An appetite.
- A blow; a stroke; a tap; a beat; especially, the beating of a drum. See beat or tuck of drum, under beat.
- A rapier. See estoc.
- Same as tang.
- A slender sword; a rapier.
- Food, especially sweets and pastry.
- A cosmetic surgical procedure in which skin or fat is removed, sometimes accompanied by muscle tightening, to create a slimmer or more youthful appearance.
- A straight sword with a narrow blade and two edges
- A body position used in some sports, such as diving, in which the knees are bent and the thighs are drawn close to the chest, with the hands often clasped around the shins.
- The part of a ship's hull under the stern where the ends of the bottom planks come together.
- A flattened pleat or fold, especially a very narrow one stitched in place.
- In bookbinding, a flap on one side of the cover, made to fold over the other side and tuck into a strap which holds it fast.
- A short pinafore.
- In needlework, a flat fold in a fabric, or in a part of a garment, fixed in place by stitches, and frequently one of a series laid parallel.
- A garment tucked, girt, or wrapped about one; in the following quotation, a turban.
- A position in skiing in which the skier squats, often while holding the poles parallel to the ground and under the arms.
- A blast; a flourish; a tucket.
- The act of tucking.
INSERT vs TUCK: VERB
- Insert casually
- Fit snugly into
- Introduce
- Put or introduce into something
- To put in between or into.
- Draw fabric together and sew it tightly
- Make a tuck or several folds in
- Fit snugly into
INSERT vs TUCK: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To draw in; contract.
- To store in a safe spot; save.
- To put in an out-of-the-way, snug place.
- To make one or more folds in.
- To wrap or cover snugly, as by tucking a blanket.
- To thrust or fold the edge of so as to secure or confine.
- To make tucks.
- To bring (a body part) into a tuck position.
INSERT vs TUCK: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To put or introduce into the body of something; interpolate.
- To place into an orbit, trajectory, or stream.
- To put into action.
- To set within something; to put or thrust in; to introduce; to cause to enter, or be included, or contained
- To put or set into, between, or among: : introduce.
- N/A
INSERT vs TUCK: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Place, fit, or thrust (something) into another thing
- In anatomy and zoology, to attach, as a muscle or ligament to a bone. See insertion, 3.
- To put in; place or cause to be placed in or among; introduce: as, to insert a key in a lock; to insert an advertisement in a newspaper.
- To draw close together; pull together.
- To gather up; draw or pull up, or in any direction; draw into folds: frequently followed by up.
- In needlework, to lay and sew tucks in: as, the waist was tucked lengthwise. See tuck, n., 2.
- To press or crowd into a narrow space or compass; stuff; cram.
- Hence To pack in barrels.
- To gird; clothe tightly or compactly; hence, to cover snugly with wrappings, as with bedclothes or rugs.
- To put into one's stomach; eat: usually with in.
- In seine-fishing, to gather or draw (fish) out of a seine by means of a tuck-seine which is shot inside of the seine.
- To pinch; nip; wound by the pressure of the finger-nail.
- To string up; hang.
- To contract; draw together.
- To make tucks: as, a sewing-machine that tucks and gathers.
- To beat; tap: said of a drum.
- Draw together into folds or puckers
INSERT vs TUCK: RELATED WORDS
- Embed, Attach, Insertion, Inclose, Slip in, Infix, Cut in, Stick in, Sneak in, Put in, Inset, Enter, Enclose, Introduce, Tuck
- Meta, Fallback, Ply, Table, Jump, Kiss, Fold, Kink, Crease, Tummy, Put, Nip, Gather, Pucker, Insert
INSERT vs TUCK: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Paste, Add, Incorporate, Inscribe, Append, Inject, Embed, Attach, Sneak in, Infix, Cut in, Enter, Enclose, Introduce, Tuck
- Target, Meta, Fallback, Table, Jump, Kiss, Fold, Kink, Crease, Tummy, Put, Nip, Gather, Pucker, Insert
INSERT vs TUCK: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Insert the new insert making sure to butt the heel and roll the orthotic into the toe section.
- After the Insert File dialog window opens, navigate to the damaged document, and then click on the Insert button.
- Check the length of the new insert against the existing insert, and trim to fit if necessary.
- The INSERT statements insert rows that contain values for some of the columns but not all.
- To insert one row into a table, you use the following syntax of the INSERT statement.
- Since we tried to insert two entities with the same id, the second insert.
- In Excel worksheet, you can insert a blank row between existing rows by using Insert function.
- Sequencing allows you to confirm the sequence of the insert, insert orientation, and the sequences of the junctions between the plasmid and insert DNA.
- Insert: Allows user to load data into a table using INSERT statement.
- Script will insert the google spreadsheet insert new row keyboard for help.
- Healthy Tuck Shop FoodTaleesha, Bernadette, and PawWah considered what changes could be made to food supplied by their school tuck shop.
- But speaking of code whoring, she does a full twisting double tuck into a standing back tuck.
- Find out if getting a tummy tuck is right for you by reading our tummy tuck FAQs.
- Lyric Stage, Jesse Tuck in TUCK EVERLASTING and Benjamin in JOSEPH.
- Are there minimally invasive tummy tuck options and tummy tuck alternatives?
- Kirk Tuck at Kirk Tuck Photography in Austin, Texas, for his outstanding work.
- Lowering handstand to tuck planche and holding or just trying tuck planche holds?
- Tuck pant legs into the tops of boots or socks, tuck in shirttails, and use an effective tick repellant.
- Spread clean linens, tuck head part of the bottom sheet, miter at side, tuck all together.
- Boys should bring a lockable tuck box which is kept in the House Tuck Room.
INSERT vs TUCK: QUESTIONS
- Can we insert woolly mammoths'genes into elephants?
- How to insert placeholders in Microsoft PowerPoint?
- Does insert--pictures insert into the cell or top of cell?
- How to use BULK INSERT or insert...select * from openrowset (bulk)?
- How to insert stored procedure insert into variable in SQL Server?
- How do you insert a null value in an INSERT statement?
- Do developers have to write multiple INSERT statements when they insert?
- Does an insert trigger fire when the insert is committed?
- How many values does an INSERT statement INSERT in access?
- How to combine after insert with instead of insert trigger?
- Which direction should your elbows Tuck when rowing?
- How many times has Tuck Everlasting been performed?
- What is the production history of Tuck Everlasting?
- What are examples of foreshadowing in Tuck Everlasting?
- What are some vocabulary words for Tuck Everlasting?
- Does insurance cover hernia repair with tummy tuck?
- Does Chin-Tuck maneuver benefit dysphagic patients?
- What is the theme of the poem Tuck Everlasting by Thomas Tuck?
- Who is Mae Tuck in Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt?
- What does Tuck do in Chapter 12 of Tuck Everlasting?