Search results
- to press together and form small folds in something such as cloth or skin: She puckered her lips and gave her grandma a kiss. [ M ] This hem is all puckered up.
dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/pucker
People also ask
What does pucker mean?
What does puffer mean?
How do you say Pucker in a sentence?
What does puckered lips mean?
PUCKER definition: 1. to tighten skin or cloth until small folds appear or (of skin or cloth) to form small folds: 2…. Learn more.
- English (US)
PUCKER meaning: 1. to tighten skin or cloth until small...
- Znaczenie Pucker, Definicja W Cambridge English Dictionary
pucker definicja: 1. to tighten skin or cloth until small...
- Pucker: German Translation
pucker translate: die Falte, die Falte. Learn more in the...
- Pucker Spanish Translation
PUCKER translate: fruncir(se), arrugar(se), fruncido,...
- Pucker: French Translation
pucker - translate into French with the English-French...
- Pucker in Traditional Chinese
PUCKER translate: 使(皮膚或布料)起皺. Learn more in the Cambridge...
- English (US)
verb. 1. to gather or contract (a soft surface such as the skin of the face) into wrinkles or folds, or (of such a surface) to be so gathered or contracted. noun. 2. a wrinkle, crease, or irregular fold. Collins English Dictionary.
Pucker is a verb for what happens when something smooth or flat gets folded up into little wrinkles, like how you pucker your lips when you go to kiss someone — you, wild flirt, you!
The meaning of PUCKER is to become wrinkled or constricted. How to use pucker in a sentence.
Pucker definition: to draw or gather into wrinkles or irregular folds, as material or a part of the face; constrict. See examples of PUCKER used in a sentence.
PUCKER meaning: 1. to tighten skin or cloth until small folds appear or (of skin or cloth) to form small folds: 2…. Learn more.
1. A wrinkle or wrinkled part, as in tightly stitched cloth. 2. A facial expression in which the lips are tightly pulled together and pushed outward. 3. A tart flavor that causes one's lips to pucker: the pucker of lemon. [ Probably frequentative of dialectal pock, bag, sack, variant of poke .]