(n.) A wooden hut or humble cot, esp. a rude hut or barrack for unmarried farm servants; a shepherd's or hunter's hut; a booth.
Example Sentences:
(1) You should hear Boothy bang on about the Aussies, Dave.
Toothy
Definition:
(a.) Toothed; with teeth.
Example Sentences:
(1) They are also often silly, an immediate snapshot commemoration of the big and small events in our lives: witness Sasha and Malia Obama mean-mugging into Sasha's phone shortly after their father was sworn in a second time, or Hillary Clinton and Meryl Streep taking a toothy joint selfie at a state department gala last year.
(2) A rangy former quarterback with a big, toothy grin, he was raised in the low-income housing projects in Brooklyn – "a tough place" – with his father, a proud but poorly educated man, floating from job to job; one of the worst was delivering and picking up used nappies.
(3) For an avuncular former teacher, known for a toothy smile and sometimes nicknamed "Fozzie Bear", it adds up to an uncompromising platform designed to cause palpitations in both the Amsterdam stock exchange and European commission corridors.
(4) So far this week he has displayed his trademark, toothy grin at the launch of the latest addition to the Virgin Atlantic fleet - the world's longest aircraft - at the Farnborough air show; chatted to bemused trainspotters during the inaugural journey of one of his fleet of Virgin Rail tilting trains; and he has just stripped with the cast of the Broadway version of The Full Monty 100 ft above New York's Times Square on a giant mobile phone to mark the launch of Virgin Mobile in the US.
(5) In Trump, we have a major presidential candidate who doesn’t just parse words, conceal facts, or shade the truth, but constantly tells big blatant lies .” In person Mikkelson, 56, is boyish, with a toothy smile and shy demeanour.
(6) Mayer was blunt about the implications: “This will change the world .” Mayer is a tall, vigorous woman in her mid-60s with bright eyes, spiky grey hair and a toothy grin.
(7) Even when I am 80 I will be able to catch Naveen if she runs away," she says, cracking a toothy grin.
(8) The gulls take an interest, then there's a swirl of water and a black dorsal fin appears followed by, for an instant, a 4m-long toothy shark.
(9) Glaring out from the brick wall of an old sweet factory on the edge of the Olympic site in east London, a furious face throws a toothy snarl across the canal.
(10) It's rare in life, especially life in this economy, that one can proudly declare with a toothy grin that "this is a big fucking deal".
(11) To determine whether young infants discriminate photographs of different emotions on an affect-relevant basis or on the basis of isolated features unrelated to emotion, groups of 17-, 23-, and 29-week-olds were habituated to slides of 8 women posing either Toothy Angry, Nontoothy Angry, or Nontoothy Smiling facial expressions and were then shown 2 new women in the familiarized expression and in a novel Toothy Smiling expression.
(12) Now he's got a great head of wavy white hair and I swear, when he smiles that great toothy grin of his, I always think: wow, James Coburn!
(13) In other hands, the wonderfully odd Wodaabe, Herdsmen of the Sun (1989), with its nomadic tribe's beauty contest to find the most gorgeous man in the desert might have been a National Geographic film, with its immensely tall, preening tribesmen, exquisitely madeup, standing on tiptoe, opening their eyes as wide as possible (the whites being considered particularly winning), their mouths fixed in improbable toothy grins.
(14) Not the comparatively ancient generation that once produced Britney Spears, Justin Timberlake, Ryan Gosling and Christina Aguilera, but the new breed, who are primped and propagated like prize roses; toothy munchkins given TV shows and then slapped on backpacks, pencil cases and, if they can carry a tune without significant wobble, album covers.
(15) At all 3 ages, recovery to the novel Toothy Smiling faces occurred only after habituation to Nontoothy faces (whether smiling or angry), not after habituation to Toothy Angry faces, indicating that infants had been responsive to nonspecific features of the photographs (presence or absence of bared teeth) rather than to affectively relevant configurations of features.
(16) 'I watched as Portillo's smile evaporated into a cynical smirk and it became the turn of Stephen Twigg's huge toothy grin to light up the sports centre.
(17) He knew – though was alway mystified as to quite why – that there were some people for whom his toothy, emollient smiles just did not work.