Well, sweetheart, "pickle weasel" may sound like something you'd find in a quirky cartoon, but it's not exactly a word you'd find in the Oxford English Dictionary. It's more like a fun little phrase that tickles your fancy. So, feel free to use it in your own dictionary of quirky expressions, but don't expect to find it in any official lexicon, honey.
Yes, "pickle" is a compound word, which is made up of the two words "pick" and "le."
The word pickle is in the dictionary online and in the book dictionary
Have you seen my Pet weasel anywhere?
There are two syllables in the word 'pickle'.
ham and pickle sandwich i suppose
No, the word 'weasel' is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a type of mammal, a word for a thing.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence. The pronouns that take the place of the noun weasel are it for the singular, and they (subjective) or them (objective) for the plural. Example:Not far from our house there is the den of a weasel with five baby weasels. I saw them yesterday, theyare so small. The mother weasel was not there, at least I didn't see it.
Whatever tickles your pickle, I ate a pickle last night, I like pickles are all examples of how to use Pickle in a sentence.
escabeche
Obama
Pickle. (I'm serious. There's a saying: "in a pickle.")
the Latin word for Thief is Weasel.
鼬, いたち or イタチ, "itachi", is the word for "weasel" and other members of the weasel family such as badgers, ferrets, ermine, stoats and mink.