| prickly heat |
a rash involving small, red, itchy spots and a prickly sensation that usually appears where sweat builds up
Ãâó: www.american-depot.com/services/resources_gl_p.asp
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|---|---|
| prickly heat |
a rash caused by trapped sweat under the skin.
Ãâó: www.health.uab.edu/show.asp
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| prick |
To make small holes in the surface of a food, usually using the tines of a fork. Pie crust is usually pricked.
Ãâó: southernfood.about.com/library/info/bld_p.htm
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| prickly pear cactus |
The fruit of any of the cacti of the genus Opuntia, native to and a staple food in Mexico and Central America. SYN: nopal.
Ãâó:
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| pricked f. |
a condition in the horse in which the soft tissue of the foot has been punctured either by a horseshoe nail or by a nail or other object the animal has stepped on, causing pain and lameness. A nail that is near, but not into, the soft tissue may cause nail bind. Called also nail prick.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
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| prick | an awl for making small holes for brads or small screws |
|---|---|
| prick | a sharp-pointed tip on a stem or leaf |
| prick | male deer in his second year |
| prick | a sharp metal spike to hold a candle |
| prick | the act of puncturing with a small point |
| prick | a sharp-pointed tip on a stem or leaf |
| prick | cause a tingling sensation |
| prick | cause a prickling sensation |
| prick | a cell in the germinal layer of the skin (the prickle-cell layer) |
| prick | perennial herb of North American prairies having dense heads of small white flowers |
| prick | small (2-4 inches) pugnacious mostly scaleless spiny-backed fishes of northern fresh and littoral waters having elaborate courtship |
| prick | small elongate fishes of shallow northern seas |
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