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Rhymes for "wreck" — perfect and near rhymes for songwriters, poets, and lyricists looking for the right ending sound.
(n)
An inspection or examination.
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(v)
(ambitransitive) To strike or pierce with the beak or bill (of a bird).
A tiny spot or particle, especially of dirt.
(ambitransitive, chiefly Scotland, Northern England) To jeer or mock; to show contempt for.
(card games) A pack or set of playing cards.
(colloquial, chiefly US) A labourer on an oil rig or in the oilpatch, either skilled or semiskilled.
(idiomatic, slang) Someone or something which is annoying, irritating or inconvenient.
Certain edible sea snails, especially, any one of numerous species of large marine gastropods belonging to Buccinidae, much used as food in Europe.
(euphemistic) Hell.
(adj)
Only used in rent seck
(slang) To have the vomiting reflex triggered.
(figurative) In traffic, any narrowing of the road, especially resulting in a delay.
(informal) Technology.
(informal) trash; worthless merchandise.
Initialism of The Episcopal Church.
A significant nod, or motion of the head or hand, especially as a call or command.
(UK, Commonwealth, Ireland) A written order directing a bank to pay money to a person or entity.
(slang) A lecher.
Dangerously fast; hell-for-leather.
(dated) A nightclub where dancing takes place.
(Northern England, Scotland) A latch or catch.
(minced oath, chiefly Ireland) Used in place of fuck.
(Northumbria, Cumbria) A splinter, usually of wood.
(figurative) An agreement to honor a current offer after its normal expiration.
(transitive, intransitive (usually with of or for), archaic) To take account of (someone or something); to care for; to consider, to heed, to regard.
(science fiction) A large piloted combat robot.
an upper deck where a ship is steered and the captain stands
(Scotland) prompt; eager
(ambitransitive) To check again.
(Jewish culture) A smell or a taste; a nip of a drink etc.
(informal) Second, ¹⁄₆₀ of a minute.
(US) Initialism of National Electrical Code.
(nautical) The aft part of the upper deck of a ship; normally reserved for officers
(US) A periodic payment, usually in the form of a paper check, received by an employee from an employer for work performed.
(nautical) An upper deck on a passenger ship on which passengers may walk, which can be covered but open to the air.
Any of several triple-distilled liqueurs flavoured with fruit e.g. Curaçao, Cointreau, and Grand Marnier.
(nautical) A ship's deck which has no overhead protection, which is open to the weather; a ship's uppermost deck.
(informal) To drop to a lying or other low position, especially quickly.
Any of several unrelated birds that have a ringed neck.
(chiefly by a wife) To nag persistently.
An indigenous Amerindian language spoken in Honduras.
A vessel with a perforated bottom for making coffee without grounds.
Archaic form of trek. [(intransitive) To make a slow or arduous journey.]
Information technology.
Application of financial engineering techniques in Japanese financial markets since their deregulation in 1984.
(uncountable) Marketing technology; technology (usually information technology) used for marketing.
(astronomy, metrology) Syllabic abbreviation of parallax second.
(informal) An executive; a person employed at the executive level.
The cockpit of a large aircraft.
(transitive, informal) To record.
(transitive) To deck, ornament, or adorn
A province in eastern Canada. Capital: Quebec City. Largest city: Montreal.
Referring to the collar of pullover garments and usually of sweaters and T-shirts, when [the collar] circles the neck. Often crew necked.
(nautical) A high, exposed deck at the stern of a ship on top of the cabin(s).
tape recorder
(uncountable) Biotechnology.
(nautical) A cross-deck about amidships, a bridge-deck or bridge: the upper light deck of a passenger-steamer.
(intransitive) To heave or retch as if to vomit.
(nautical) The deck below the spar deck.
Alternative form of sundeck. [An area on a ship's deck or on the roof of a house used for sunbathing.]
(nautical) The topmost full-length deck of a ship.
(nautical, by extension) The members of a ship's company who are not officers.
knocking the puck away by jabbing at it with the hockey stick
a written order directing a bank to pay money
a thick short powerful neck
(chess) A check by means of a discovered attack against the opponent's king.
(nautical) The deck on an armed ship (man-of-war) on which the guns are placed.
(adv)
unable to act freely
a deck at the top of a passenger ship
A check/cheque written against a bank account with insufficient funds to pay the bearer the amount of the check.
(architecture) The floor of a belfry, made to serve as a roof to the rooms below.
a check drawn against funds deposited in your personal checking account
Alternative spelling of yech. [(chiefly US) An exclamation of disgust.]
the fourth or lowest deck
a check issued in payment of wages or salary
the uppermost sheltered deck that runs the entire length of a large vessel
a call of students' names in a classroom
a cut of beef from the neck of the animal
the space in a ship or aircraft for storing cargo
a monthly payment made to someone who has become disabled and is unable to work
the upper deck of an aircraft carrier; used as a runway
(Scotland) Alternative form of make (“halfpenny”). [Brand; marque; manufacturer; maker.]
a check reimbursing an aged person for the expenses of health care
a monthly payment made to someone who is retired from work
the deck below the main deck
(N)
Adaptec, Inc., was a computer storage company and remains a brand for computer storage products.
A Hong Kong foot.