A kitchen spatula.
Television remote control, clicker.
A type of ball bowled by a leg spin bowler, which spins backwards and skids off the pitch with a low bounce.
A flat lever in a pinball machine, triggered by the player to strike the ball and keep it in play.
A kind of false tooth, usually temporary.
A small flat used to support a larger one.
Someone who flips, in the sense of buying a house or other asset and selling it quickly for profit.
Someone who flips in any other sense, for example throwing a coin.
In marine mammals such as whales, a wide flat limb, adapted for swimming.
A flat, wide, paddle-like rubber covering for the foot, used in swimming.
To lift one or both flippers out of the water and slap the surface of the water.
A heat sink.
An object or callback that captures events; an event sink.
A stage trapdoor for shifting scenery.
Descending motion; descent.
A depression in a stereotype plate.
A destination vertex in a transportation network.
An abode of degraded persons; a wretched place.
A sinkhole.
A drain for carrying off wastewater.
An excavation smaller than a shaft.
A habitat that cannot support a population on its own but receives the excess of individuals from some other source.
One or several systems that remove currency from the game's economy, thus controlling or preventing inflation.
A basin used for holding water for washing.
A depression in land where water collects, with no visible outlet.
The motion of a sinker pitch.
A place that absorbs resources or energy.
To demean or lower oneself; to do something below one's status, standards, or morals.
To cause to decline; to depress or degrade.
To drink (especially something alcoholic).
To (directly or indirectly) cause a vessel to sink, generally by making it no longer watertight.
To push (something) into something.
To make by digging or delving.
To pot; hit a ball into a pocket or hole.
To pay absolutely.
To be overwhelmed or depressed; to fail in strength.
To descend or submerge (or to cause to do so) into a liquid or similar substance.
To decrease in volume, as a river; to subside; to become diminished in volume or in apparent height.
To experience apprehension, disappointment, dread, or momentary depression.