penetration | the act of entering into or through something, the penetration of upper management by women |
market penetration | the extent to which a product is recognized and bought by customers in a particular market |
penetration | the act (by a man) of inserting his penis into the vagina of a woman |
penetration incursion | an attack that penetrates into enemy territory |
cutlassfish frost fish hairtail | long-bodied marine fishes having a long whiplike scaleless body and sharp teeth, closely related to snake mackerel |
penetration bomb | a bomb with about % explosive and a casing designed to penetrate hardened targets before the explosive detonates |
penetration | the depth to which something penetrates (especially the depth reached by a projectile that hits a target) |
penetration | the ability to make way into or through something, the greater penetration of the new projectiles will result in greater injuries |
penetration insight | clear or deep perception of a situation |
Jack Frost | a personification of frost or winter weather |
Frost Robert Frost Robert Lee Frost | United States poet famous for his lyrical poems on country life in New England (-) |
Kennan George F. Kennan George Frost Kennan | United States diplomat who recommended a policy of containment in dealing with Soviet aggression (-) |
freeze frost | weather cold enough to cause freezing |
frost heave frost heaving | upthrust of ground or pavement caused by the freezing of moist soil |
ice crystal snow mist diamond dust poudrin ice needle frost snow frost mist | small crystals of ice |
Virginia crownbeard frostweed frost-weed Verbesina virginica | tall perennial herb having clusters of white flowers, the eastern United States |
frostweed frost-weed frostwort Helianthemum canadense Crocanthemum canadense | perennial of the eastern United States having early solitary yellow flowers followed by late petalless flowers, soalled because ice crystals form on it during first frosts |
Frost's bolete Boletus frostii | a fungus with a red cap and a red coarsely reticulate stalk |
frost icing | the formation of frost or ice on a surface |
frost hoar hoarfrost rime | ice crystals forming a white deposit (especially on objects outside) |
frost | damage by frost, The icy precipitation frosted the flowers and they turned brown |
frost | cover with frost, ice crystals frosted the glass |
frost | provide with a rough or speckled surface or appearance, frost the glass, she frosts her hair |
frost ice | decorate with frosting, frost a cake |
ice up frost over ice over | become covered with a layer of ice, of a surface such as a window, When the wings iced up, the pilot was forced to land his plane |
frost-bound | (of the ground) made hard by frost |