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Words that sound like "battle" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
(military) A general action, fight, or encounter, in which all the divisions of an army are or may be engaged; a combat, an engagement.
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(v)
(intransitive, Oxford University) To stand indebted in the college-books for provisions and drink from the buttery.
A container, typically made of glass or plastic and having a tapered neck, used primarily for holding liquids.
Any of the four members of the Beatles quartet; or a person associated with the Beatles.
(Cornwall) A beetle; a mallet.
A town in Sefton borough, Merseyside, England, formerly in Lancashire.
A surname.
(nonstandard, humorous) To serve as or perform the duties of a butler.
An evergreen Indian creeping shrub, Piper betle, whose dried leaves are chewed with betel nut: the betel pepper.
A district of Madhya Pradesh, India.
(historical) A meteorite or similar-looking rough stone thought to be of divine origin and worshipped as sacred.
a floating hotel; a boat that acts as a hotel
(chiefly US) Name used for many cemeteries in the American Old West; nickname for any cemetery.
(N)
an American experimental rock group, founded in 2002 in New York City by Ian Williams (formerly of Don Caballero and Storm & Stress).
A plant (Ocimum basilicum).
(adj)
(heraldry) Embattled.
One who works hard in the face of adversity.
A parish constable, a uniformed minor (lay) official, who ushers and keeps order.
An English surname.
(slang) Money, especially when acquired or spent illegally or improperly; swag.
(intransitive) To rattle; to make a scampering noise.
An apparatus on which crushed ore is washed.
(India, dated) Extra pay; especially an extra allowance to an English officer serving in India.
A surname from French.
(historical) A former Scottish copper coin of less value than a bawbee, worth about one-sixth of an English penny.
The act of someone who bats.
(transitive, Scotland) To fondle or pet; to pamper.
(New Zealand) A small food container, usually made of plastic or cardboard, typically used for containing hot chips, yoghurt or other foodstuffs.
(Northumbria, Midlands) To urinate.
(British) To wander or ramble in a leisurely, indirect, or aimless manner, such as by walking or driving.
A surname from Polish.
A former fortress and prison in Paris, France, the storming of which in 1789 began the French Revolution.
a first name of Germanic origin most commonly found among Swedish men.
A species of eagle, Terathopius ecaudatus, endemic to Africa and Arabia.
(transitive) To assail with the tongue; flout; rally.
(sports) An object transferred by runners in a relay race.
An extremely successful and influential British rock music quartet that operated primarily in the 1960s.
(slang) Mad, crazy, silly.
(transitive) To confuse or perplex (someone) completely; to bewilder, to confound, to puzzle.
A holy place.
(intransitive) (often passive voice) Followed by on: to eat greedily; to glut.
The capital city of Basel-Stadt canton, Switzerland.
Alternative form of Basel (a city in Switzerland). [The capital city of Basel-Stadt canton, Switzerland.]
A small, flat-bottomed type of boat.
Alternative form of Batumi. [A seaside city on the Black Sea coast and capital of Adjara, an autonomous republic in southwest Georgia.]
(historical) An Irish measure of two feet (61 cm) in length.
A surname transferred from the given name.
A neighbourhood in the Hooghly district of the Indian state of West Bengal, founded by Portuguese settlers.
(transitive) To make quiet or still; calm; pacify.
(obsolete) Causing contention; contentious.
A member of any of several different peoples of North Sumatra in Indonesia.
(obsolete) A medieval fortified house, in northern England and the Scottish borders
a town in the Boussouma Department of Boulgou Province in south-eastern Burkina Faso.
The tail of a horse or cow, allowed to grow out and then trimmed horizontally so as to form a tassel; a horse or cow having such a tail.
Projecting over.
Abbreviation of bundle. [(countable) A group of objects held together by wrapping or tying.]
(transitive) To rattle; rattle vigorously.
An abutment.