The soft center of a fruit.
A magazine or book containing lurid subject matter and characteristically printed on rough, unfinished paper.
A mass of chemically processed wood fibres (cellulose).
The underside of a human fingertip; a finger pad.
The very soft tissue in the spleen.
A mixture of wood, cellulose and/or rags and water ground up to make paper.
The soft center of a tooth.
A suspension of mineral particles, typically achieved by some form of agitation.
To deprive of pulp; to separate the pulp from.
To beat to a pulp.
To make or be made into pulp.
Of or pertaining to pulp magazines; in the style of a pulp magazine or the material printed within such a publication.
A woody plant smaller than a tree, and usually with several stems from the same base.
A word mispronounced by replacing some consonant sounds with others of a similar place of articulation due to interference from one's knowledge of an indigenous Kenyan language.
A liquor composed of vegetable acid, fruit juice (especially lemon), sugar, sometimes vinegar, and a small amount of spirit as a preservative. Modern shrub is usually non-alcoholic, but in earlier times it was often mixed with a substantial amount of spirit such as brandy or rum, thus making it a liqueur.
To mispronounce a word by replacing some consonant sounds with others of a similar place of articulation due to interference from one's knowledge of an indigenous Kenyan language.