Moll

Etymology
From Moll, an archaic nickname for Mary.

Noun

 * 1) A woman companion of a gangster, especially a former or current prostitute.
 * 2) A prostitute or woman with loose sexual morals
 * 3)  bitch, slut (i.e. an insult directed at females).
 * 4)  a girlfriend of a surfie or bikie Note that, as Australian pronunciation merges the /ɒ/ and /əʊ/ phonemes before /l/ (they both become [oʊl]), this word is very commonly spelt "mole" in Australia, probably by contamination with the word mole, referring to sneaky people.  Indeed, the Australian Oxford dictionary does not list the Australian meaning of the term under the headword "moll", but only under "mole", although it does recognise that "mole" in this sense is "probably" a mere "variant of moll".

Etymology 1
From mollis.

Adjective

 * 1) moist
 * 2) weak

Noun

 * 1) marrow, as in bone marrow
 * 2) the soft part of a fruit

Etymology 2
From mullus:.

Noun

 * 1) several species of fish
 * 2) * moll de fang — Mullus barbatus
 * 3) * moll de roca — Mullus surmuletus
 * 4) * moll reial — Apogon imberbis

Etymology 3
From moles.

Noun

 * 1) quay, jetty
 * 2) breakwater

Etymology
From mollis:.

Noun

 * 1)  minor (scale or key)

Derived terms

 * a-moll
 * e-moll
 * h-moll
 * fís-moll
 * cís-moll
 * d-moll
 * g-moll
 * c-moll
 * f-moll

Noun
moll


 * 1) heap

Noun

 * 1)  minor scale

moll moll moll moll fa:moll moll moll moll moll moll moll moll moll