cheeky. ( cheekier comparative) ( cheekiest superlative ) If you describe a person or their behaviour as cheeky, you think that they are slightly rude or disrespectful but in a charming or amusing way. (mainly BRIT) adj. The boy was cheeky and casual, Martin gave her a cheeky grin.
If you're being cheeky you're being brash or irreverent. If you're a cheeky child, you're probably just being impudent and disrespectful — and you're probably going to get in trouble. Cheeky has shades of meaning according to the degree of offense taken, and this may vary between British and American English.
rascal(n) Synonyms: rogue, scoundrel, caitiff, scamp, knave, villain, miscreant, varlet, trickster, renegade, scapegrace, rapscallion.
adjective. The definition of sassy is someone or something that is lively, bold and a little feisty. An example of sassy is a quick witted, clever girl.
noun. a disreputable person; villain. a mischievous or impish rogue. an affectionate or mildly reproving term for a child or old manyou little rascal; the wicked old rascal kissed her.
The definition of cheeky is someone who is brash, bold or sassy. An example of someone who would be described as cheeky is a spunky, sassy girl who isn't afraid to talk back to anyone. YourDictionary definition and usage example.
A rascal is a scoundrel or a trickster. If your new puppy cheerfully chews on your shoes and chases the cat, you might want to consider naming her Rascal. Rascals are mischievous, but their intentions are to have fun, rather than to be cruel. An armed robber is not a rascal, but the class clown is a rascal.
Rasclat (or raasclaat) is a deeply offensive and derogatory term, used in Jamaican English (and since the 1950s in the UK). Literally 'arse cloth', i.e. a sanitary towel, it is synonymous with the equally negative blood-claat (blood cloth). In both cases the terms can be used as an insult or an exclamation.
Concerned with or portending bloodshed; sanguinary. In low language: Excessive; atrocious; heinous: as, he's a bloody fool, or a bloody rascal.
Sans is one such word. Borrowed from French, where it means “without”, Shakespeare used it frequently, for example when talking about the final age of man, when our bodies decay and we lose our faculties, in As You Like It: Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.
rustle verb (MAKE NOISE)
[ I/T ] to make soft sounds, or to cause something, such as cloth, paper, or leaves, to make soft sounds: [ T ] A sudden breeze rustled the leaves.bloody. Something that's bloody is stained or covered with blood, like a bloody nose. In British slang, bloody means something like “very.” That's bloody brilliant! To bloody something is to cover it in blood: "I will bloody your nose if you say that again!" It comes from the Old English blodig, from blod, or "blood."