Show me
of
Words that sound like "bright" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Emitting much light; visually dazzling; luminous, lucent, radiant.
Relevance: 0%
(n)
A woman in the context of her own wedding; one who is going to marry or has just been married.
(v)
(transitive, ditransitive) To transport toward somebody/somewhere.
(derogatory) A child who is regarded as mischievous, unruly, spoiled, or selfish.
Brutal; cruel; fierce; ferocious; savage; pitiless, without intelligence or reason.
(informal) A fault in wine caused by Brettanomyces yeast.
(informal, formerly offensive) A British person.
A female given name.
A male given name transferred from the surname, variant of Brett, ultimately meaning "a Breton".
(of champagne) very dry, and not sweet
A clasp or clip for gathering and holding the hair.
A surname.
(medicine) An abnormal sound in the body heard on auscultation (for example, through using a stethoscope); a murmur.
A salt or ester formed by the combination of boric acid with a base or positive radical
A diamond in the rough; an uncut diamond.
Damaged or injured by fire or heat.
(N)
a Scandinavian variant of the German masculine given name Berend, which is the Low German form of Bernard (Bernhard).
A male given name from German.
A surname from German.
(uncountable) A foodstuff made by baking dough made from cereals.
(transitive) To cut into something by clamping the teeth.
(intransitive) To break from internal pressure.
Wide in extent or scope.
To produce offspring sexually; to bear young.
A diminutive form of male given names containing the element bert, such as Albert or Robert, also used as a formal given name.
The young of certain animals, especially a group of young birds or fowl hatched at one time by the same mother.
(transitive) To weave together, intertwine (strands of fibers, ribbons, etc.); to arrange (hair) in braids.
(dialectal) Alternative form of braid (“board, shelf, plank”). [(obsolete, countable) A sudden movement; a jerk, a wrench.]
A male given name.
(geography) An area of sea lying between two promontories, larger than a bay, wider than a gulf.
(transitive, intransitive) To make tea or coffee by mixing tea leaves or coffee beans with hot water.
(computing, most commonly) A unit of computing storage equal to eight bits, which can represent any of 256 distinct values.
(transitive) To bear or give birth to (a child).
(UK, dialect, archaic) A fish of the turbot kind; the brill.
A surname from French.
Vigour or vivacity.
Bold or vivid colours; also, clothes, cosmetics, etc., with such colours.
(Scotland, transitive, obsolete) To goad or prick.
(intransitive) To dig a tunnel or hole.
(intransitive) Of an animal (now chiefly of animals related to the ass or donkey, and the camel): to make its cry.
(obsolete, rare) A tract of land that has been left untilled for a long time.
(in combination) Having a brow of the specified kind.
a former province of northwestern france on a peninsula between the english channel and the bay of biscay
a genus of flowering plants in the legume family, Fabaceae.
A braid.
(mineralogy) A mineral, barium sulphate, with the chemical formula BaSO₄.
The breezefly.
An originally French variety of soft cheese made from cow's milk.
Obsolete form of braid. [(obsolete, transitive) To make a sudden movement with, to jerk.]
(transitive) (nautical) To bring (a ship or other vessel) into a berth (noun etymology 1, sense 1.1); also, to provide a berth for (a vessel).
(UK, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, slang) To murder by suffocation.
Archaic spelling of breed. [To produce offspring sexually; to bear young.]
(slang) A male friend of a male.
Any of the flowering plants of the genus Euphrasia, originally as used to treat eye infections.
(UK, Ireland, Commonwealth, slang) A fool, contemptible person.
An often-made but previously debunked argument
(ambitransitive) To talk much and to little purpose; to be loquacious; to speak foolishly.
Of or relating to a pore.
a free, open-source computer software package widely used for speech analysis and synthesis in phonetics and other fields of linguistics.