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Words that sound like "annoyed" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Troubled, irritated by something unwanted or unliked (an annoyance); vexed.
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Not awed; not afraid, impressed, or in awe.
Not owed.
(n)
(music, often informal) In rhythm, the second half of a divided beat.
(v)
(transitive) To disturb or irritate, especially by continued or repeated acts; to bother with unpleasant deeds.
(heraldry) A billow- or wave-like marking.
A female given name from French.
A surname.
(adv)
(obsolete) In the night-time, at night.
(N)
a commune in the Alpes-de-Haute-Provence department in the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur region of southeastern France.
(rare) Any grouping or system containing nine objects.
Shaped like a cone; conical.
Alternative form of annate. [The first year's profits of a Catholic benefice, as traditionally paid directly to the Pope.]
an acronym for Internationally agreed Numbers for the Identification of (bibliographic) Data.
Unut, also known as Wenut or Wenet, was a prehistoric Ancient Egyptian hare and snake goddess of fertility and new birth.
(computing) A data structure representing an object such as a file or a directory in a Unix (or similar) file system.
(literally) Mindlessness.
Having ganoid scales or plates, as a fish; specifically, of or pertaining to the Ganoidei.
Not having been oiled.
A city, the county seat of Garfield County, Oklahoma, United States; see Wikipedia:Enid, Oklahoma
Anad is a village in Thiruvananthapuram district in the state of Kerala, India.
The terminal point of something in space or time.
At or towards the front; in the direction one is facing or moving.
(literary, poetic or formal, especially Philippines) Again, once more; afresh, in a new way, newly.
(transitive) To receive pleasure or satisfaction from something.
Being the subject of a hunt.
(archaic, poetic) India; the East.
(horror fiction) Being animate, though non-living.
Inborn; existing or having existed since birth.
(computing) Clipping of initialize. [To assign initial values to something.]
A language spoken by the Selk'nam people in Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego in southernmost South America.
A member of any of several Aboriginal peoples of coastal Arctic Canada, Alaska, and Greenland.
A language spoken in Indonesia.
(figurative) Not subdued or deterred.
A male given name from French, equivalent to English Benedict.
(linguistics) Abbreviation of Indian English. [A major dialect of the English language, spoken in many varieties in India and by people from India.]
(Hebrew: אחד) a Middle Eastern given forename primarily used by Muslims and Jews.
Sweetened, with, or as if with, honey.
Affluent, rich.
One who annoys.
(zoology) A hardy breed of dog from Siberia.
To ride or paddle a canoe.
A relative whose relation is traced only through female members of the family.
(also transliterated as Emad, Imed and Aimad ) an Arabic masculine given name and surname and means "support" or "pillar".
Anaa, Nganaa-nui (or Ara-ura) is an atoll in the Tuamotu archipelago, in French Polynesia.
Alternative spelling of moneyed. [Affluent, rich.]
Initialism of University of Maryland, College Park.
made less brittle by heating and then cooling
Having only a single eye, particularly when a greater number is normal.
Not having been aged.
unbidden, uninvited.
The Amoy dialect of the Hokkien language.
Archaic form of imide. [(organic chemistry) a form of amide in which the nitrogen atom is attached to two carbonyl groups - R₁CONHCOR₂]
A surname from German.
One of the elders who stood with Ezra the Scribe. (biblical character)
(organic chemistry) a form of amide in which the nitrogen atom is attached to two carbonyl groups - R₁CONHCOR₂
Not aired.
Linnaeus's two-toed sloth, Choloepus didactylus, a two-toed sloth native to South America.
(archaic) Nigh; near.
an American queercore band formed by the singer and drummer Rachel Carns and the guitarist Radio Sloan in Portland, Oregon, in the mid-1990s.
A two-toed sloth.
A municipality of Tarlac, Philippines.
french dramatist noted for his reinterpretations of greek myths (1910-1987)
Not aimed