louse|loused|louses|lousing in English
verb
[laʊs]
mess up, spoil (Slang); complicate, confuse (Slang); remove lice from
Use "louse|loused|louses|lousing" in a sentence
1. Cootie definition, a louse, especially one affecting humans, as the body louse, head louse, or pubic louse
2. Cootie - a parasitic louse that infests the body of human beings body louse , Pediculus corporis louse , sucking louse - wingless usually flattened bloodsucking insect parasitic on warm-blooded animals
3. Sarakolet counterentry Blisterous thyrse schoolie loused Abnakis Kerrick
4. He butted in and loused up the deal.
5. Then you loused it up by exceeding your orders.
6. Landed me with such a louse.
7. Cootie definition is - body louse
8. Even a louse would go away.
9. Apterans louse flies golden biting flies
10. Collembolan nonabusively Asteroidean scummed angust louse-up
11. 3 synonyms for Booklouse: book louse, deathwatch, Liposcelis divinatorius
12. 8 Among people, the pubic louse is usually spread by sexual contact, but the gorilla louse could have been contracted in some other way.
13. 12 The last event in this history of human-louse cohabitation was the transfer of the gorilla's Phthirus louse to people.
14. 10 The human pubic louse, on the other hand, is related to the gorilla louse, from which it parted company some 13 million years ago.
15. Actual size in stages of growth of the head louse .
16. 3 synonyms for Booklouse: book louse, deathwatch, Liposcelis divinatorius
17. A major book-feeding insect is the Booklouse (or book louse)
18. Cootie - a parasitic louse that infests the body of human beings
19. LOUSE HUNTING by ISAAC ROSENBERG Nudes---stark Aglisten Yelling in lurid glee
20. And " Epidemic, " because everyplace I go, people say I louse things up.
21. You get a bullet in the head for every louse I find.
22. Cal·loused, cal·lous·ing, cal·lous·es To make or become Callous
23. One of the more well known speciec is the pigeon louse fly Pseudolynchia canariensis'.
24. Cootie definition: a slang name for the body louse Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples
25. The virus came to the tulip from a louse living on peaches and potatoes .