kid in Gujarati ગુજરાતી
- છે તરવું ⇄ kid gujarati
- તેનું ચામડું ⇄ kid gujarati
- બકરીનું બચ્ચું ⇄ kid gujarati
- બનાવવું ⇄ kid gujarati
- બાળક. (બકર ીએ) વિયાવુ ં ⇄ kid gujarati
- લવારું ⇄ kid gujarati
kid in Kashmiri कॉशुर
- بَچہِ ⇄ kid kashmiri
- دونٛکھہٕ دیُن،گِنٛدُن ⇄ kid kashmiri
- مَزاق کَرُن،گِنٛدُن ⇄ kid kashmiri
- پَریشان کَرُن ⇄ kid kashmiri
- چِھرٕ ⇄ kid kashmiri
kid in Marathi मराठी
- अगदी लहान मूल ⇄ kid marathi
- करडू ⇄ kid marathi
- कोकरू ⇄ kid marathi
- गंमत करणे ⇄ kid marathi
- बकरीचे पिलू ⇄ kid marathi
- बकरीचे पिल्लू ⇄ kid marathi
- बाळ ⇄ kid marathi
- लहान मूल ⇄ kid marathi
- शेळीचे करडू ⇄ kid marathi
kid in Sindhi سنڌي
- ڇيلو، ڦر، ٻار، ننڍو پيپ ⇄ Kid sindhi
kid in Tamil தமிழ்
- ஆட்டுக்குட்டி ⇄ kid tamil
kid in Telugu తెలుగు
kid in English
- kid ⇄ adj. 1. made of kid leather or other soft leather resembling kid.
2. (Informal.) younger.
Ex. She teased her kid brother.english - kid ⇄ adv. kiddingly. english
- kid ⇄ expr. kid oneself, (Informal.) to deceive oneself; rationalize.
Ex. In spite of her acute sense of the ways in which people tell lies, one feels she is kidding herself (New York Review of Books).english - kid ⇄ expr. kids, gloves or shoes made of kid.
Ex. His great hands ... are encased in lemon-coloured kids (Thackeray).english - kid ⇄ kid (1), noun, adjective, verb, kidded,kidding. english
- kid ⇄ kid (2), verb, kidded,kidding,noun.
(Slang.)english - kid ⇄ kid (3), noun.
1. a small tub.
2. a wooden dish in which food was formerly served to sailors.english - kid ⇄ noun humbug; fooling. english
- kid ⇄ noun 1. a young goat.
2. its flesh, used as food.
3. its skin, used as fur.
4. leather made from the skin of a young goat, used for gloves and shoes; kidskin.
Ex. These gloves are of kid.
5. (Informal.) a child.
Exenglish - kid ⇄ v.i., v.t. to give birth to (a young goat). english
- kid ⇄ v.t., v.i. 1. to tease playfully; talk in a joking way; banter.
Ex. He's always kidding. He had kidded him affectionately ... for giving somebody a promissory note without noticing how much it was for (Edmund Wilson).
2. to humbug; fool.english