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Discover LudwigThe word 'pouter' is a correct and usable word in written English.
It is a noun and refers to someone who pouts or displays a sulky or discontented expression. Example: The child stood in the corner, arms crossed and a pouter on his face, refusing to apologize for his behavior.
Dictionary
pouter
noun
A person who habitually pouts; a sourpuss
Exact(12)
Except that he wasn't a pouter, he wasn't a hider.
Shortly afterward, he set up house with Miriam Moore-Robinson, a dark-haired pouter pigeon of a girl, buxom and exuberantly pretty, whom he had known, on and off, for about four years, and whose marriage to a veterinary surgeon was already at the breaking point.
They are usually small and fluffy, as in some chickens and pouter pigeons.
Darwin noted the great disparities among the English carrier, short-faced tumbler, pouter, fantail and other breeds.
"Lana used to thrust out her bosom like a pouter pigeon".
"She has a comical way of puffing up her face like a pouter pigeon and of hitting a high note with a kind of hysterical relief that she got there," Mr. Gelb wrote.
Similar(5)
The all-male cast sport ballooning hose and pouter-pigeon breasts.
From the domesticated pigeons have been derived the various fancy breeds, such as tumblers and pouters, and many genetic aberrations that have given pleasure to countless enthusiasts.
There are scores of pigeon breeds, all of them varieties of the rock dove, the bird you see in cities. Fancy breeds — such as pygmy pouters, oriental frills, and short-faced tumblers — are raised for show and for performance.
He favored the fanciest breeds — pouters, carriers, barbs, fantails, short-faced tumblers and many more.
During any other night in New York, that would be an event with no sign on the door, with plenty of P's -- Prada, pouters, possibly Paris -- located inside.
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