Similar words: torpor, corporal, corporate, corporeal, incorporate, corporation, noise, tortoise. Meaning: ['pɔrpəs /'pɔː-] n. any of several small gregarious cetacean mammals having a blunt snout and many teeth.
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31. He no sooner recovers his equilibrium than the next porpoise comes and hits him another crack.
32. A corpse rising saltwhite from the undertow, bobbing landward, a pace a pace a porpoise.
33. But time is running out: Unless threats to its survival are met head on, the porpoise could be gone in 15 years, says Wang Ding, an ecologist at the Institute of Hydrobiology (IHB) in Wuhan.
34. In another game, as the turtle swims across the oceanarium, the first porpoise swoops down from above and butts his shell with his belly. This knocks the turtle down several feet.
35. Ryo Taira (right) and an unidentified man lift a young porpoise out of a flooded rice field after it was swept there by the earlier tsunami in Sendai, Japan, on March 22, 2011.
36. She has named them Tursiops australis, although they will commonly be known as the Burrunan dolphin, an Aboriginal name meaning large sea fish of the porpoise kind.
More similar words: torpor, corporal, corporate, corporeal, incorporate, corporation, noise, tortoise, counterpoint, airport, hoist, patois, noisily, cloister, moisture, bourgeois, corpse, orphan, purpose, boisterous, bourgeoisie, spoil, point, connoisseur, on purpose, overpower, amorphous, points, absorption, solar power.