paunch in English

noun
1
a large or protruding abdomen or stomach.
Within a month, you are guaranteed a paunch , a pot belly, and the inability to walk up stairs.
2
a thick strong mat used to give protection from chafing on a mast or other spar.

Use "paunch" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "paunch" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "paunch", or refer to the context using the word "paunch" in the English Dictionary.

1. " Yes, that's why you've got a paunch.

2. Conn drummed his paunch reflectively.

3. They kidded him about his paunch.

4. His paunch bulged over a sash.

5. The processing technology of crystallized yak paunch was studied.

6. You're getting a paunch, did you know that?

7. He finished his dessert and patted his paunch.

8. Mr. Stryver laughed till he shook his precocious paunch.

9. His once lean figure was developing a paunch.

10. He was a man of medium height with a slight paunch.

11. The driver had a paunch hanging over his belt.

12. To operate this machine, you must have a paunch and wear green pants.

13. For they have no deathly pangs; and their paunch is fat.

14. And by the look of that paunch, he hasn't been doing enough yoga.

15. During the prison term, Paunch could be released on parole only under supervision.

16. With his unruly beard and comfortable paunch he looked like a well-fed prophet.

17. Francis was too fat, his face was podgy and he had a paunch.

18. The mother goat and to fetch scissors , andand, and then she cut open the monster's paunch.

19. Merv lay back in his chair with his hands crossed above his paunch, listening to the radio.

20. He was a man of medium height with paunch. His eyes shone with joy.

21. Wally crossed the mirrored lobby, sucking in his paunch as he caught sight of himself.

22. A frog should have just a wee bit of a paunch, like the Baron de Charlus.

23. I feel pressure on my back as Frank leans forward and pushes me against the window with his paunch.

24. Despite his stocky frame and his paunch, the hand holding the fountain pen was delicate, thin - fingered.

25. The Chuckwalla lizard has a rather round, paunch belly-like body with a dark brown-grey toned color

26. He was a short, florid man, normally very fat, now very thin, the skin of his paunch hanging slackly in folds.

27. ‘Paunch was a chilled blend of Arrack, a distilled palm sap, with sugar, citrus, water and spices.’ ‘A unique Lebanese alcoholic creation is arak, a colorless, …

28. Chang Baoning, a 40-year-old government bureaucrat with a paunch and purple-tinted eyeglasses, watched the scenery whirl by from a whisper-quiet cabin.

29. Abattoir wastes consist of several pollutants such as animal feaces, blood, bone, fat, animal trimmings, paunch content and urine from operations or areas like lairage, stunning or bleeding

30. This page shows answers to the clue Abdominous, followed by 2 definitions like “ Having a large belly ”, “ Having a protuberant belly ” and “ Having a paunch or big belly ”

31. Military to increase “punch” with less “paunch.” Whereas Cyberwar refers to knowledge-related conflict at the military level, netwar applies to societal struggles most often associated with low intensity conflict by non-state

32. He had a paunch blackened teeth and the raspy cough of an avid smoker and he never stopped watching even when he allowed himself a cigarette smoking a cheap brand named after the city itself.

33. Abdominous: having a paunch or big belly abducent: turning away; bearing away from abeam: in a line at right angles to the length of a vessel, on the beam abear: to bear; to comport; to behave abecedarian: of, like or pertaining to the order of the alphabet; rudimentary abecedism: word created from the initials of words in a phrase abele

34. Alveolus (n.) 1706, "a hollow," especially "the socket of a tooth," from Latin Alveolus "a tray, trough, basin; bed of a small river; small hollow or cavity," diminutive of alvus "belly, stomach, paunch, bowels; hold of a ship," from PIE root *aulo-"hole, cavity" (source also of Greek aulos "flute, tube, pipe;" Serbo-Croatian, Polish, Russian ulica "street," originally "narrow opening;" Old