frounce

Etymology
From, from "to wrinkle, frown", from , from , , from. Akin to 🇨🇬 "fold, wrinkle, crease" (🇨🇬 "wrinkle"), 🇨🇬 "frown", 🇨🇬 "wrinkle, crease" (🇨🇬 "wrinkle, crease, ruck"). More at ruck2.

Noun

 * 1) A canker in the mouth of a hawk.
 * 2) A plait or curl.
 * 1) A plait or curl.
 * 1) A plait or curl.

Translations

 * Finnish:

Verb

 * 1)  To curl.
 * 2) * 1879, Harmon Seeley Babcock, "The Peanut Man", in Trifles, Providence Press Company (1879), page 43:
 * Beard untrimmed by barber's shears,
 * Hair all frouncing 'bout his ears,
 * 1)  To crease, wrinkle, to frown.
 * 2) * 1871, George Mac-Henry, Time and Eternity: A Poem, A L Bancroft and Company (1871), page 42:
 * He frounced his brow, and from his scornful eye
 * Shot wrath indignant, and disdain and pride,
 * 1) * 2000, Patrick Madden, "Down on Batlle's Farm", Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Volume 33, Number 2, Summer 2000, page 160:
 * "But they know who you are?" I asked, and frounced my brow in skeptical doubt.
 * 1) To gather into or adorn with plaits, as a dress.
 * Shot wrath indignant, and disdain and pride,
 * 1) * 2000, Patrick Madden, "Down on Batlle's Farm", Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Volume 33, Number 2, Summer 2000, page 160:
 * "But they know who you are?" I asked, and frounced my brow in skeptical doubt.
 * 1) To gather into or adorn with plaits, as a dress.
 * 1) To gather into or adorn with plaits, as a dress.

Etymology
, from, from , from.

Noun

 * 1) A wrinkle, fold, or pleat in fabric, hair, or porcelain.
 * 2) A disease involving mouth sores in birds of prey.
 * 3)  A grimace; a scornful look.