A container used to carry and dispense water for plants (a watering can).
An ounce (or sometimes, two ounces) of marijuana.
A protective cover for the fuel element in a nuclear reactor.
Jail or prison.
A more or less cylindrical vessel for liquids, usually of steel or aluminium, but sometimes of plastic, and with a carrying handle over the top.
Buttocks.
Headphones.
A cube-shaped buoy or marker used to denote a port-side lateral mark
A chimney pot.
A tin-plate canister, often cylindrical, for preserved foods such as fruit, meat, or fish.
An E-meter used in Scientology auditing.
To have the potential to; be possible.
To cover (the fuel element in a nuclear reactor) with a protective cover.
Used with verbs of perception.
May; to be permitted or enabled to.
To discard, scrap or terminate (an idea, project, etc.).
To fire or dismiss an employee.
To shut up.
To know how to; to be able to.
To seal in a can.
To hole the ball.
To preserve by heating and sealing in a jar or can.
The boss canned him for speaking out.
A tool used to remove excess moisture from a print.
A street-cleaning machine consisting of a roller made of squeegee blades pulled by a horse.
A short-handled tool, especially as used on car windshields and home windows.
A long-handled tool used on ships for swabbing the decks and spreading protective coatings.
Similar long-handled tools used for drying or leveling surfaces such as paths and roadways.
A tool used to force the ink through the stencil in silk-screen printing.
A person who uses a squeegee, especially one who "cleans" the windshield of a car stopped at a traffic light and then demands payment.
To use a squeegee.