English to English
noun
- a groove or furrow (especially one in soft earth caused by wheels)
source: WordNet 3.0
- a settled and monotonous routine that is hard to escape
They fell into a conversational rut.
source: WordNet 3.0
- applies to nonhuman mammals: a state or period of heightened sexual arousal and activity
source: WordNet 3.0
- Sexual desire or œstrus of deer, cattle, and various other mammals; heat; also, the period during which the œstrus exists.
source: Webster 1913
- A track worn by a wheel or by habitual passage of anything; a groove in which anything runs. Also used figuratively.
source: Webster 1913
verb
- be in a state of sexual excitement; of male mammals
source: WordNet 3.0
- hollow out in the form of a furrow or groove
Furrow soil.
source: WordNet 3.0
- To have a strong sexual impulse at the reproductive period; -- said of deer, cattle, etc.
source: Webster 1913
- To cover in copulation.
source: Webster 1913
- To make a rut or ruts in; -- chiefly used as a past participle or a participial adj.; as, a rutted road.
source: Webster 1913
English to Tagalog
noun
- [rœt] Umungal
source: Diccionario Ingles-Español-Tagalog