- footsie foot·sie n
- ['fʊtsɪ]
fam
to play footsie with sb — fare piedino a qn
English-Italian dictionary. 2013.
to play footsie with sb — fare piedino a qn
English-Italian dictionary. 2013.
Footsie — (also: FTSE) Financial Times Actuaries 100 ndex : Dow average of London. Bloomberg Financial Dictionary * * * Footsie Foot‧sie [ˈfʊtsi] noun JOURNALISM FINANCE an informal name for the financial: • The Footsie closed 2.3 po … Financial and business terms
footsie — /foot see/, n. Informal. 1. Sometimes, footsies. the act of flirting or sharing a surreptitious intimacy. 2. play footsie or footsies with, a. to flirt with, esp. by clandestinely touching someone s foot or leg; be slyly or furtively intimate… … Universalium
footsie — foot|sie [ˈfutsi] n play footsie (with sb) informal a) to secretly touch someone s feet with your feet under a table to show that you think they are sexually attractive b) AmE to work together and help each other in a dishonest way ▪ politicians… … Dictionary of contemporary English
footsie — foot|sie [ futsi ] noun play footsie with someone INFORMAL to show sexual interest in someone by touching their feet with yours, usually under a table … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
footsie — foot•sie [[t]ˈfʊt si[/t]] n. Informal. inf Sometimes, footsies. the act of flirting or sharing a surreptitious intimacy • play footsie(s) with Etymology: 1930–35 … From formal English to slang
footsie — foot·sie … English syllables
footsie — foot·sie || fÊŠtsɪ n. stealthy flirtatious touching with the feet (under a table); cooperation in a cunning or devious way; (Informal) foot (used by children or when speaking to young children) … English contemporary dictionary
Diminutive — In language structure, a diminutive,[1] or diminutive form (abbreviated dim), is a formation of a word used to convey a slight degree of the root meaning, smallness of the object or quality named, encapsulation, intimacy, or endearment.[2][3] It… … Wikipedia
footsies — foot·sie || fÊŠtsɪ n. stealthy flirtatious touching with the feet (under a table); cooperation in a cunning or devious way; (Informal) foot (used by children or when speaking to young children)n. footsie, stealthy flirtatious touching with the… … English contemporary dictionary
tootsy — toot•sy ortoot•sie [[t]ˈtʊt si[/t]] n. pl. sies. Slang. sts a foot • Etymology: 1850–55; appar. expressive alter. of footsie … From formal English to slang