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Words that sound like "adoration" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
(uncountable) The act of adoring; loving devotion or fascination.
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A positive emotion including wonder and approbation; the regarding of another as being wonderful
(N)
"Adorations" is Killing Joke's first single from their sixth studio album, Brighter than a Thousand Suns, released in August 1986.
(obsolete) The act of addressing or directing one's course.
A solemn oath.
(archaic, rare) A piling up; accumulation.
The state or quality of being moderate; avoidance of extremes
(biology) The process of providing an adequate amount of water to body tissues.
A gradual reduction in number.
Act of joining together into a single political entity.
A formal, often ceremonial speech.
(often business) The synthesis of ideas.
The ability of a substance to stick to an unlike substance.
A person who is androgynous.
(v)
To remove rationing restrictions from (a product or commodity), so that the amounts one can buy or obtain are no longer limited by regulation.
(uncountable, arithmetic) The arithmetic operation of adding.
The whole number of copies of a work printed and published at one time.
A male given name from Latin or Etruscan.
(countable) A performance, by an aspiring performer, to demonstrate suitability or talent.
An amount of time or a particular time interval.
The act of altering or making different.
(computing) The use of repetition in a computer program, especially in the form of a loop.
(also figuratively) The act of turning or whirling, especially around a fixed axis or centre; a circular or spiral motion; rotation.
A surname from French.
(adj)
of or pertaining to Thrace or the Thracians or the extinct Thracian language.
The use of letters to represent sounds, words, etc., in a language.
(literature, poetry) Of or pertaining to the Roman poet Horace (Quintus Horatius Flaccus; 65–8 BCE) or to his works or style.
The act of erasing; a rubbing out or obliteration; erasure.
(US, military) An individual canned, precooked, or prepared wet ration formerly issued to land forces in the US military.
(obsolete) A delay.
(rare) The process or act of making an oath.
Permission to enter, or the entrance itself; admittance; entrance; access
An unexpected, wonderful, or preternatural appearance; especially, one by a ghost, phantom, or suchlike; the entity itself.
(Christianity) Of or pertaining to Arius or Arianism.
A surname transferred from the given name.
An irregular open wound to soft tissue.
(surgery) The act of removing the testicles.
A female given name from French.
The act of saturating or the process of being saturated.
The process of becoming mature.
(historical) The Roman emperor Publius Aelius Traianus Hadrianus.
Harshness; unpleasantness.
A tendency or wish to avoid someone or something.
(archaic) The committing of an outrage.
The act or process of macerating.
(obsolete) Roasting, baking.
(uncountable) The state of being bothered; annoyance, vexation.
(medicine) A state that is characterized by compulsive drug use or compulsive engagement in rewarding behavior, despite negative consequences.
The tendency to attract.
(uncountable) The act or process of operating (verb): agency; the exertion of power, physical, mechanical, or moral.
The beginning of something.
That which nourishes; nutriment.
The transfer of energy via radiation.
(uncountable) The result of having been worn away or eroded, as by a glacier on rock or the sea on a cliff face.
The lightest chemical element (symbol H), with an atomic number of 1 and atomic weight of 1.008.
Negotiation to resolve differences conducted by an impartial party.
A person of high birth; a nobleman.
The act of educing, of deducing: deduction.
A female given name.
A male given name from Ancient Greek, of historical usage, notably borne by Origen of Alexandria, an early Church Father.
An orator or eloquent public speaker.
(anatomy) The action by which the parts of the body are drawn towards its axis
The wearing away of surface material.
A person from Mauritius or of Mauritian descent.
A small greenish-brown carp, Carassius carassius, farmed in parts of Europe.
The act of lauding; high praise or commendation.
Archaic form of Cretan. [Of or relating to Crete or its inhabitants.]
attrition; erosion by friction
The process of becoming hard.
the Dutch and Afrikaans spelling of the given name Adrian.
(18 April 359 – 25 August 383) emperor of the Western Roman Empire from 367 to 383.
Lack of moderation.
(geology) Rock deformed by orogeny; a belt of such rock(s).
(obsolete) adornment