Show me
of
Words that sound like "chaotic" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Filled with chaos.
Relevance: 0%
Of or relating to the Celts.
Capable of burning, corroding or destroying organic tissue.
(n)
The Afroasiatic language traditionally spoken by the Copts in Egypt, now extinct and used only as a liturgical language.
the eighth month of the hindu calendar
Rare spelling of Celtic. [A branch of the Indo-European languages that was spread widely over Western and Central Europe in the pre-Christian era.]
A surname from Serbo-Croatian.
ritual, relating to cult (religious ritual)
canting
(obsolete) Latex; natural rubber.
A surname from Polish.
Acronym of California Institute of Technology.
(countable) A person who appraises the works of others.
Relating to motion.
Relating to water; living in or near water, taking place in water.
(adv)
In a chaotic manner.
Any of several omnivorous mammals, of the genus Nasua, that live in the range from the southern United States to northern Argentina.
(extremely rare) Relating to political or organisational power.
(archaic) cometary; relating to a comet.
(mathematics) A homogeneous polynomial in two or more variables.
(v)
(transitive) To look after as a caretaker.
A subfamily of the Afroasiatic family of languages.
(anatomy, pathology) Relating to, or exhibiting, kyphosis.
(genetics) A set of overlapping DNA segments, derived from a single source of genetic material, from which the complete sequence may be deduced.
Comatose, unconscious.
A city and district of Odisha, India.
(slang) Synonym of Canadian English (“the variety of the English language used in Canada”).
A surplice, in England and America usually one shorter and less full than the ordinary surplice and with short sleeves, or sometimes none.
(martial arts) Any of a sequence of positions and movements used in many martial arts.
(computing) A device or program capable of performing transformations on a data stream or signal.
(mathematics) Of or relating to the fourth degree.
(music) A digital feature used by disc jockeys that locks a track to its original key regardless of changes made to the tempo.
Archaic form of coiata.
Alternative form of Caradog. [A male given name from Welsh.]
(N)
Saint Cadoc or Cadog (also Modern Welsh: Catawg or Catwg; born Strayner, Joseph R., ed.
A locality in the Shire of Campaspe, northern Victoria, Australia
A surname.
A small house.
Using the techniques of comedy, as a composition, performer etc; amusing, entertaining.
Pertaining to the sense of hearing, the organs of hearing, or the science of sounds.
(biology) Of, pertaining to, or produced by life or living organisms.
That which releases emotional tension, especially after an overwhelming experience.
A surname from French.
(pathology) Severe pains that grip the abdomen or the disease that causes such pains (due to intestinal or bowel-related problems).
Relating to comedy.
Synonym of conical.
(idiomatic, informal) Something that is easy or simple, or that does not present a great challenge.
(geology, of rock) Made from fragments of pre-existing rocks.
(nonce word) A greatcoat.
(now rare) Chemical.
Dated form of coyote (animal). [(zoology) Canis latrans, a species of canine native to North America.]
Of or pertaining to bile.
(humorous) A unit of mass equal to approximately 2.5 pounds (1.1 kilograms) that is used to measure the mass of fecal matter.
Initialism of computer-assisted telephone interviewing.
(idiomatic) Something extremely easy.
(poetry) Intended to be sung by a choir or chorus (e.g. a hymn)
Of, pertaining to, or resembling cheese.
Any of four (previously two) species of parrot in the genus Pionites.
Alternative spelling of kopek. [A Russian monetary unit equal to one hundredth of a ruble.]
A village and civil parish in North Yorkshire, England, previously in Richmondshire district (OS grid ref SE2497).
(physics) Relating to, functioning as, or occurring at a cathode.
(obsolete) Pertaining to azote, or nitrogen; formed or consisting of azote
Alternative spelling of cacique. [(historical) A tribal chief in the Spanish West Indies.]
A surname from Czech.
Any substance or means which, applied to animal or other organic tissue, burns, corrodes, or destroys it by chemical action; an escharotic.