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Words that sound like "bold" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Courageous, daring.
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(cricket) (Dismissed) by the bowled ball hitting and breaking the batsman's wicket.
Having bolls
(v)
(transitive) To form (something) by combining materials or parts.
(specifically) Having little or no hair on the head, or having a large area of bare scalp on top of the head.
Cooked in boiling water.
(in combination) Having a specified kind or number of balls.
To secure the release of an arrested person by providing bail.
Having a specified kind of bill (beak or beak-like projection).
(intransitive) To wail; to give out a blaring cry.
Swollen.
(N)
Bild or Bild-Zeitung is a German tabloid newspaper published by Axel Springer SE.
(n)
A surname.
Having a bell attached.
(transitive) To wrap into a bale.
Alternative form of bolt (“to sift”). [(transitive) To connect or assemble pieces using a bolt.]
(archaic in Scotland, Northern England, obsolete elsewhere) Shelter, refuge or protection.
(freely translated as Picture or Image) an Afrikaans-language daily newspaper that was launched on 16 September 1974.
a beal
(Scotland, archaic) A place of shelter; protection; refuge.
Without horns; said of livestock that normally have horns, but which have been bred to be hornless, or which have been dehorned.
(of walking routes) Marked with poles.
A roughly hemispherical container used to hold, mix or present food, such as salad, fruit or soup, or other items.
(informal) well-built, muscular or toned.
A large mass of stone detached from the surrounding land.
Bent or curved.
(ambitransitive) To indicate by signs, as future events; to be an omen of; to portend or foretell.
A throwing weapon made of weights on the ends of a cord.
The trunk or stem of a tree.
The rounded seed-bearing capsule of a cotton or flax plant.
A native speaker of one of the Baltic languages: Lithuanian, Latvian, Old Prussian, Sudovian and related languages.
Obsolete form of bode. [(ambitransitive) To indicate by signs, as future events; to be an omen of; to portend or foretell.]
(South Africa) A ridge or small hill.
A grape variety used to make madeira (wine).
A county of Qitaihe, Heilongjiang, China.
(transitive, informal) To make (a font or some text) bold.
Obsolete form of bowl. [A roughly hemispherical container used to hold, mix or present food, such as salad, fruit or soup, or other items.]
A habitational surname from Old English.
Dated spelling of boulder.
The leaves of this tree, used in traditional medicine for hepatic troubles and genitourinary inflammation.
Having bowels; hollow.
(transitive) To grasp or grip.
Of cooked meat, prepared by being torn into fine pieces.
With the outermost layer or skin removed.
Having a pile or nap.
(obsolete) Enclosed with a paling.
(intransitive) To sound with a peal or peals.
Having one or more holes.
(intransitive, of a liquid) To form a pool.
(slang) Pilled-up, intoxicated on pills.
Archaic spelling of hold. [A grasp or grip.]
(now dialectal) A hard knock.
Synonym of pal around.
A young bird, a chick; now especially, a young game bird (turkey, partridge, grouse etc.).
(intransitive) To whimper or whine.
Having the hair styled in bangs.
(transitive, informal) To smoke a bong.
Of low quality.
The space immediately within the outer wall of a castle or fortress.
A West Chadic language spoken in Nigeria.
(among disabled people) A person who has no disability.
(mythology, biblical) A storm and fertility god of the Phoenician and Canaanite pantheons, reckoned as chief of the gods by the 1st millennium BC.
(usually "baile funk") A specific genre of dance music originating in Rio de Janeiro, also known as Funk Carioca
(Scotland) The chief magistrate of a Scottish barony or part of a county, with functions like a sheriff's.
(music) A genre of music from Sri Lanka and India, mainly using European instruments and rhythms.
(Scottish local government) The equivalent of alderman in some Scottish cities.
A surname from French.
To make the characteristic cry of a sheep.