- kissagram
- kissa·gramn see kissogram* * *kissagram → academic.ru/40918/kissogram">kissogram
English-german dictionary. 2013.
English-german dictionary. 2013.
kissagram — kiss|a|gram [ˈkısəgræm] n another spelling of ↑kissogram … Dictionary of contemporary English
kissagram — n. (British) message service in which the messenger delivers a kiss instead of the message or together with a message … English contemporary dictionary
kissagram — noun (C) another spelling of kissogram … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
kissagram — kissˈogram or kissˈagram noun A service whereby a kiss is delivered to a specific person (eg on their birthday) by a kissogram girl (or man) usu in glamorous or unusual costume • • • Main Entry: ↑kiss … Useful english dictionary
kissogram kissagram — noun (C) a humorous greeting for your birthday etc that is delivered by someone in a special costume, or the person who delivers it and kisses you … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
The Eleventh Hour (Doctor Who) — 203 – The Eleventh Hour Doctor Who episode The newly regenerated Doctor confronts one of the Atraxi. Cas … Wikipedia
Le Prisonnier zéro — Épisode de Doctor Who Le onzième Docteur et Amy Pond Titre original … Wikipédia en Français
Одиннадцатый час (Доктор Кто) — 203 – Одиннадцатый час The Eleventh Hour Серия «Доктора Кто» … Википедия
-gram — [græm] suffix [in nouns] [: Latin; Origin: gramma, from Greek, from gramma; GRAM] a message delivered as an amusing surprise ▪ On his birthday we sent him a kissagram (=a woman who was paid to give him a message and kiss him) … Dictionary of contemporary English
kissogram — kiss|o|gram kissagram [ˈkısəgræm] n a humorous greeting for your ↑birthday etc that is delivered by someone in a special ↑costume who delivers it and kisses you … Dictionary of contemporary English
grammar — [14] Etymologically, grammar is the ‘art of letters’. The word comes via Anglo Norman gramere, Old French gramaire, and Latin grammatica from Greek grammatiké, a noun use of the adjective grammatikós ‘of letters’ (whence English grammatical [16]) … The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins