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Rhymes for "hostile" — perfect and near rhymes for songwriters, poets, and lyricists looking for the right ending sound.
(v)
(ambitransitive) To restore a friendly relationship; to bring back or return to harmony.
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(adj)
Morally low; base; despicable.
(transitive) To charm, delight or captivate.
Capable of doing many things competently.
Young; not fully developed.
Of, or relating to old age.
(n)
A mass of things heaped together; a heap.
A clear path/passage through rows of seating.
(ambitransitive) To attack (someone) with abusive language.
A collection of papers collated and archived together.
An occasion on which a person or thing is tested to find out how well they perform or how suitable they are.
Good and important enough to spend time, effort, or money on.
Senses relating to a thin, pointed object.
Tangible; perceptible to the sense of touch.
(transitive, programming) To use a compiler to process source code and produce executable code.
An uncertain duration of time, a period of time.
(Ancient Greece) A local division of the people; a clan or tribe.
(economics) Concerned with the exchange of goods for profit.
(adv)
(formal or literary) Formerly; in the past.
(US) A spout inserted in a maple (or other tree) to draw off sap.
(in particular) To make angry.
During the time that something is happening, often specifically in a different place.
(countable) The outermost shape, view, or edge of an object.
(uncountable) The state of being banished from one's home or country.
A commercial overnight lodging place, with dormitory accommodation and shared facilities, especially a youth hostel.
Fixed, not movable.
A supply (especially a large one) of something kept for future use, specifically in case the cost of the item increases or if there a shortage.
For some time; for a short time.
(usually in the plural) Any material made of interlacing fibres, including carpeting and geotextiles.
A colonnade surrounding a courtyard, temple, etc., or the yard enclosed by such columns.
(idiomatic) The members of an organization, community, etc. who are not in leadership positions.
A style of living that reflects the attitudes and values of a person or group.
(obsolete, transitive) To hide; to secrete; to conceal.
A person who loves or admires the country, culture or people of England.
(idiomatic) Occasionally; sometimes.
A device measuring the time of day by the position of a shadow cast by a pole or plate (gnomon) upon an engraved series of marks.
One who loves France, the French people, or French culture.
A short homily or commentary on a passage of Scripture.
(idiomatic, humorous) The trash container; the wastebasket.
The first matter of the cosmos, from which the four elements arose, according to the doctrines of Empedocles and Aristotle.
Pertaining to a rib.
(music) A form of rapping in which the emcee makes up lyrics while performing.
The style in which someone's hair has been cut and arranged.
A person who has a fondness or appreciation for wine.
(computing) A datafile containing only plain, human-readable text, distinct from documents with embedded formatting.
A unit of distance for air transport; equal to a nautical mile.
(nuclear physics) An early nuclear reactor fueled by uranium and moderated with graphite.
(historical) A former county of Scotland, now incorporated into Argyll and Bute.
(humorous) The trash; the wastebasket.
the style of a particular artist or school or movement
a unit of length equal to a quarter of 1 mile
(transitive) To refashion (something) in a new style or shape, to fit another purpose.
A digestive fluid containing fatty droplets, found in the small intestine.
Synonym of nautical mile, a unit of distance now equal to exactly 1852 meters
(computing) A data file containing usually one record per line.
An inexpensive supervised lodging place, primarily for young people.
(of a line or queue) One person wide.
(UK) The mile of 5,280 feet or 1,760 yards, distinguished from the traditional mile of 5,000 feet employed before the 1593 Weights and Measures Act.
(computing) A computer file that is not a text file, consisting of data other than human-readable text.
A lover (of something).
(countable) A unisex given name.
(usually in the plural) A corrugated steel pile, which is vertically driven into the ground to form a wall of sheet piling.
(now inexact) Synonym of nautical mile, exactly 1,852 meters.
Alternative form of lifestyle. [A style of living that reflects the attitudes and values of a person or group.]
A male given name transferred from the surname.
(computing) A file on disk used as auxiliary memory.
Alternative form of datafile. [(computing) A computer file that stores data for use by an application or system.]
(computer science) a computer file that is used as the authority in a given job and that is relatively permanent
(roofing) A curved or bent tile specifically designed to cover the apex or ridge of a pitched roof, where two roof planes converge.
(archaic, botany) A rostellum.
a british unit of length equivalent to 1,853.18 meters (6,082 feet)
(N)
A computer file is a resource for recording data on a computer storage device, primarily identified by its filename.
(unit of measurement) Any of the various miles used to measure length on land, as opposed to the nautical mile.
counting the number of white and red blood cells and the number of platelets in 1 cubic millimeter of blood
a unit of length equal to half of 1 mile
(computer science) a computer file dedicated to storing and updating computer backups
battery consisting of voltaic cells arranged in series; the earliest electric battery devised by volta
the arrangement of the hair (especially a woman's hair)
a tile shaped so as to cover the hip of a hip roof
(now historical) A kind of fine white bread or cake.
a file with parallel edges
(computer science) a computer file stored on a magnetic disk and identified by a unique label
a way of expressing something (in language or art or music etc.) that is characteristic of a particular person or group of people or period
(computer science) a computer file that contains data that serve as input to a device or program
a thin flat slab of fired clay used for roofing
an island area in a roadway from which traffic is excluded; provides safe area for pedestrians
a file with converging edges
(computer science) a computer file containing relatively transient data about a particular data processing task