Pout

Noun

 * 1) One's facial expression when pouting.
 * 2) * 2008, Vladimir Nabokov, Natasha, written 1924, translated by Dmitri Nabokov
 * With a pout, Natasha counted the drops, and her eyelashes kept time.
 * 1) A fit of sulking or sullenness.

Derived terms

 * pouting (n)

Verb

 * 1)  To push out one's lips.
 * 2)  To be or pretend to be ill-tempered; to sulk.
 * 3)  To say while pouting.

Noun

 * 1)  Shortened name of various fishes such as the hornpout (Ameiurus nebulosus, the brown bullhead), the pouting (Trisopterus luscus) and the eelpouts (Zoarcidae).

Related terms

 * eelpout, eel-pout
 * hornpout

Verb

 * 1)  To shoot poults.

Adverbs for Pout
pettishly; sulkily; prettily; coyly; petulantly; tearfully; despondently.

Thesaurus
bag, balloon, beetle, belly, belly out, bilge, billow, bouge, brood, bug, bulge, dilate, distend, frown, gloom, glower, goggle, grimace, grump, jut, knit the brow, long face, look black, look sullen, lour, lower, make a face, make a lip, make a moue, make a mouth, mop, mop and mow, mope, moue, mouth, mow, mug, overhang, pet, poke, pooch, pop, pouch, project, protrude, pull a face, rictus, round out, scowl, snarl, stand out, stick out, sulk, swell, swell out, wry face, wry mouth

Etymology 1
pouten:, probably from Scandinavian (compare pute: 'pillow, cushion',  dial. puta: 'to be puffed out',  pude: 'pillow, cushion'), from  'swollen' (compare  eelpout, East Frisian püt: 'bag, swelling',  puit: ( puut) 'frog', Low German puddig: 'inflated'), from  'to swell' (compare Sanskrit undefined: 'bubble').

Etymology 2
From -pute: as in aelepute:, from Indo-European root beu having a meaning associated with the notion "to swell".

Noun

 * Dutch: pruilmondje,, tuitmondje
 * Finnish: mutristus, nyrpistys


 * French:
 * Spanish: mohín


 * Finnish: murjotus, mökötys

Verb

 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: 撅嘴
 * Dutch: pruilen, de lippen
 * Finnish:
 * French:, faire la moue


 * German: schürzen
 * Russian: надувать губы, дуться
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Cyrillic: пућити усне
 * Roman: pućiti usne


 * Chinese:
 * Mandarin: 撅嘴,
 * Dutch: pruilen
 * Finnish:
 * French:
 * German: schmollen
 * Italian: mettere il broncio


 * Japanese: 拗ねる, やさぐれる
 * Russian: дуться, кукситься
 * Serbo-Croatian:
 * Cyrillic: дурити се
 * Roman: duriti se
 * Spanish: hacer un mohín, ponerse de morros

Synonyms

 * moue

Anagrams

 * tupo
 * up to