Show me
of
Words that sound like "beverage" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
A liquid to consume; a drink, such as tea, coffee, liquor, beer, milk, juice, or a soft drink, usually excluding water.
Relevance: 0%
A town in the City of Whittlesea and Shire of Mitchell, Victoria, Australia.
A surname.
Borago officinalis, a Mediterranean plant with rough, cucumber-flavored leaves and stems, used in salads and cooked.
(adj)
(stock market, of the price of financial instruments) Characterized by or expecting falling prices.
Hunting or trapping beaver.
An English surname
Obsolete form of borage. [Borago officinalis, a Mediterranean plant with rough, cucumber-flavored leaves and stems, used in salads and cooked.]
(obsolete) A drink.
A construction or natural feature that spans a divide.
(by extension) Any influence which is compounded or used to gain an advantage.
The act by which something is laid bare.
Behaving as a boor; rough in manners.
A market town and civil parish with a town council and county town of the East Riding of Yorkshire, England.
An element of various place names in the geographical region between the northeastern extreme of Russia and the U.S. state of Alaska.
(trademark) A brand of beef extract made in the UK.
(archaic) Lineage, parentage; rank, especially as high or noble.
(historical) A portion of plate armour to protect the lower face and the neck, typically in two parts, called upper bevor and lower bevor.
Boarlike.
A surname from German.
Alternative spelling of barège. [A type of gauzy fabric used for making dresses, originally made in Barèges.]
(v)
To give reluctantly.
(statistics) Any measure of central tendency, especially any mean, the median, or the mode.
(intransitive) To die; to cease to live.
(Roman Catholicism, Anglicanism, Lutheranism, Eastern Orthodoxy) An administrative part of a diocese that has its own church.
A surname from Old English.
Alternative form of paviage. [(law, historical) A contribution or a tax for paving streets or highways.]
(journalism) The amount and type of attention given to an event or topic in news media or other media.
The use of a buffer.
(informal, representing northern pronunciation) had better.
A Bantu language spoken in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Peers as a group; the titled nobility or aristocracy.
Somewhat bitter.
dutch architect and town planner (1856-1934)
Causing boredom or tiredness; making one feel tired and impatient.
A small succulent fruit, of any one of many varieties.
(countable) A semiaquatic rodent of the genus Castor, having a wide, flat tail and webbed feet, native to the Northern Hemisphere.
A male given name from Irish.
(nautical) A large flat-bottomed towed or self-propelled boat used mainly for river and canal transport of heavy goods or bulk cargo.
A mound of earth and stones raised over a grave or graves.
An English or Irish surname from Anglo-Norman.
(collective) A small group of people, especially girls or women.
(ballet) A handrail fixed to a wall used for ballet exercises.
The exclusion of someone; blackballing.
An independent city in Simcoe County, Ontario, Canada.
improvement
Synonym of boyar.
An unincorporated community in Hamilton County, Ohio, United States.
(British, Ireland, slang) A beverage, chiefly an alcoholic one.
A diminutive of the unisex given name Beverly/Beverley.
A town in Berri Barmera council area, Riverland region, South Australia.
(N)
a Norwegian masculine given name originating from the Old Norse name Bragi, developing from the word "bragr" meaning poetry.
the jewish rite of circumcision performed on a male child on the eighth day of his life
apart from anything else; without additions or modifications
A barangay of Arteche, Eastern Samar, Philippines.
A city, the county seat of Fannin County, Georgia, United States.
Abbreviation of beige. [A slightly yellowish gray colour, as that of unbleached wool.]
(British, slang) Violence, especially that associated with youth gangs.
A shady, leafy shelter or recess in a garden or woods.
(foaled 1 April 2018) an Irish-bred, British-trained Thoroughbred racehorse.
A person who begs.