Yes
Steep as a verb: dunk, soak.Steep as an adjective: high, bold.
wall
It is from the word 'labes', meaning a fall or slide.
It was horrifying to watch the semi-truck slide on the slippery road and go rolling down a steep embankmment.
Depends which bluff you mean. Bluff as a steep promontory or a steep bank comes from an early Dutch word 'Blaf' meaning 'broad' . Bluff as a poker term is early American English, taken from another Dutch word, 'Bluffen' meaning to 'brag or boast'. Another Dutch word 'verbluffen' meaning to 'baffle or mislead' is also applicable.
Origins in Northern Spain meaning 'steep hill' or even 'small cottage'
No, it is an adjective."Steep" is usually an adjective, or word used to describe a noun. For example, if you say, "That was a steep cliff," then "steep" describes the "cliff." A noun is a word used to describe a person, place, or thing. However, there are cases when you can use the word steep as a noun, in which case it means a steep slope.
A steep incline. A precipice.
That was a very steep hill!
The word steep has one syllable.
On a pirate ship, there are crews to clean up the poop decks.
Precipitous means dangerously steep.