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Meaning of शोषक in English

  • Absorbing; swallowing; absorptive.
  • Anything which absorbs.
  • Any substance which absorbs and neutralizes acid fluid in the stomach and bowels, as magnesia, chalk, etc.; also a substance e. g., iodine) which acts on the absorbent vessels so as to reduce enlarged and indurated parts.
  • The vessels by which the processes of absorption are carried on, as the lymphatics in animals, the extremities of the roots in plants.
  • Drying; desiccative.
  • A medicine or application for drying up a sore.
  • Producing absorption.
  • A medicine or substance which produces absorption.
  • Capable of being absorbed or swallowed up.
  • One who, or that which, absorbs.
  • Having power, capacity, or tendency to absorb or imbibe.
  • Coal-black; very black.
  • That may be explored; as, an explorable region.
  • Exploratory.
  • One who, or that which, sucks; esp., one of the organs by which certain animals, as the octopus and remora, adhere to other bodies.
  • A suckling; a sucking animal.
  • The embolus, or bucket, of a pump; also, the valve of a pump basket.
  • A pipe through which anything is drawn.
  • A small piece of leather, usually round, having a string attached to the center, which, when saturated with water and pressed upon a stone or other body having a smooth surface, adheres, by reason of the atmospheric pressure, with such force as to enable a considerable weight to be thus lifted by the string; -- used by children as a plaything.
  • A shoot from the roots or lower part of the stem of a plant; -- so called, perhaps, from diverting nourishment from the body of the plant.
  • Any one of numerous species of North American fresh-water cyprinoid fishes of the family Catostomidae; so called because the lips are protrusile. The flesh is coarse, and they are of little value as food. The most common species of the Eastern United States are the northern sucker (Catostomus Commersoni), the white sucker (C. teres), the hog sucker (C. nigricans), and the chub, or sweet sucker (Erimyzon sucetta). Some of the large Western species are called buffalo fish, red horse, black horse, and suckerel.
  • The remora.
  • The lumpfish.
  • The hagfish, or myxine.
  • A California food fish (Menticirrus undulatus) closely allied to the kingfish (a); -- called also bagre.
  • A parasite; a sponger. See def. 6, above.
  • A hard drinker; a soaker.
  • A greenhorn; one easily gulled.
  • A nickname applied to a native of Illinois.
  • To strip off the suckers or shoots from; to deprive of suckers; as, to sucker maize.
  • To form suckers; as, corn suckers abundantly.
  • of Sucker
  • of Suck
  • Drawing milk from the mother or dam; hence, colloquially, young, inexperienced, as, a sucking infant; a sucking calf.
  • An animal that suckles its young; a mammal.
  • of Suckle
  • A young child or animal nursed at the breast.
  • A small kind of yellow clover (Trifolium filiforme) common in Southern Europe.

English usage of शोषक

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