Of a role: significant; major; meaty.
Carrying more fat than usual on one's body; plump; not lean or thin.
Bountiful.
Abounding in riches; affluent; fortunate.
Fertile; productive.
Thick; large.
Rich; producing a large income; desirable.
Oily; greasy; unctuous; rich (said of food).
Being a shot in which the ground is struck before the ball.
Bulbous; rotund.
Such tissue as food: the fatty portion of (or trimmings from) meat cuts.
A specialized animal tissue with high lipid content, used for long-term storage of energy: fat tissue.
That part of an organization deemed wasteful.
A fat person.
The best or richest productions; the best part.
A lipid that is solid at room temperature, which fat tissue contains and which is also found in the blood circulation; sometimes, a refined substance chemically resembling such naturally occurring lipids.
An erection.
A beef cattle fattened for sale.
A poorly played shot where the ball is struck by the top part of the club head. (see also thin, shank, toe)
Primary; most important; first level in importance.
Chosen or assumed among a branch of possible values of a multi-valued function so that the function is single-valued.
The chief administrator of a school.
A diapason, a type of organ stop on a pipe organ.
The construction that gives shape and strength to a roof, generally a truss of timber or iron; or, loosely, the most important member of a piece of framing.
A dancer at the highest rank within a professional dance company, particularly a ballet company.
The primary participant in a crime.
The first two long feathers of a hawk's wing.
A security principal.
A legal person that authorizes another (the agent) to act on their behalf; or on whose behalf an agent or gestor in a negotiorum gestio acts.
The chief executive and chief academic officer of a university or college.
The money originally invested or loaned, on which basis interest and returns are calculated.
A partner or owner of a business.
One of the turrets or pinnacles of waxwork and tapers with which the posts and centre of a funeral hearse were formerly crowned