piggy

[ US /ˈpɪɡi/ ]
[ UK /pˈɪɡi/ ]
NOUN
  1. a young pig
ADJECTIVE
  1. resembling swine; coarsely gluttonous or greedy
    the piggy fat-cheeked little boy and his porcine pot-bellied father
    swinish slavering over food
    piggish table manners
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How To Use piggy In A Sentence

  • I'm not saying I believe in curses, but I wouldn't want my mission to be the one they choose to piggyback Lightsail-1 on. Solar sails to take flight - Boing Boing
  • The piggybank is set to hit Japanese shops on September 6 with a price tag of 4, 935 yen ($45.76), said Bandai.
  • Desperate copywriters use the ‘in the tradition of’ device, piggybacking on another writer's fame.
  • WC Fields looms round and grumpy, his bulbous nose glowing, piggy eyes shut from lack of sleep.
  • He lifted me up on his back and gave me a piggyback ride downstairs.
  • Pet cheap plymouth hotels are disenchanted to refrigeration the medroxyprogesterone for pet phlogopite as the ingratitude of noncompliant for a pet are piggyback agamogenetic than june padding. Rational Review
  • Authority is there to counteract the piggy part of the self, the part that wants nothing more than to wallow in muck, doing nothing, staying stubbornly inert and apathetic. An Education « Tales from the Reading Room
  • Wall Street would like nothing better than to make social security their own personal piggy bank, just as they now engrasp the FED. Will Hillary Take SS Benefits Away From The Boomers
  • Sally went to her bedroom and pulled her piggy bank from its hiding place the closet.
  • Throwing and catching the disc will test speed, agility and stamina and a game of piggy in the middle adds a competitive element. Times, Sunday Times
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