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Words that sound like "correct" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Free from error; true; accurate.
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(v)
To twist, bend, or contort, especially in a way that produces strain.
Broken so that cracks appear on, or under, the surface.
(intransitive) To make a croak sound.
(intransitive) To make a prolonged sharp grating or squeaking sound, as by the friction of hard substances.
(informal, Canada, US) drunk (of a person)
(n)
A surname.
A mark ⟨ ‸ ⟩ used by writers and proofreaders to indicate that something is to be inserted at that point.
(transitive) To make something that was wrong become right; to remove error from.
One who corrects.
(medicine, dentistry) A hand-held surgical instrument, often with a scoop or hook at its tip, used for cleaning or debriding biological tissue.
A surname from French.
(obsolete) A drove or herd.
(Scotland) Having attended church for the first time after a wedding, birth, or other significant event.
Upright; vertical or reaching broadly upwards.
A canal in a city, with houses on each side.
(sports) A game played outdoors with bats and a ball between two teams of eleven, popular in England and many Commonwealth countries.
(slang, smoking, of a pipe) Empty with nothing left to smoke but ash.
(informal) Criticism.
A painful muscular cramp or spasm of some part of the body, as of the neck or back, making it difficult to move the part affected.
A male given name.
(architecture) A sturdy timber with a curve or angle used for primary framing of a timber house, usually used in pairs.
Supported upon crutches.
(UK, dialect) A dwarf.
(medicine, colloquial) Cricothyrotomy; cricothyroidotomy.
(obsolete) A letter or character.
(intransitive) To form cracks.
(transitive) To bring into existence; (sometimes in particular:)
A bend; turn; curve; curvature; a flexure.
The summit of a hill or mountain ridge.
A large open box or basket, used especially to transport fragile goods.
(of food) Prepared by cooking.
The call of a frog or toad.
(slang, Canada, US, countable and uncountable) Silly talk, a foolish belief, a poor excuse, nonsense.
Andrographis paniculata, a plant native to the Indian subcontinent and used in the traditional medicine of parts of Asia.
(firearms) Of a firearm or crossbow; to have the cock lifted or prepared to be fired.
An island in the Mediterranean, and the largest in Greece.
(transitive) To touch or kiss lovingly; to fondle.
Clipping of bureaucrat. [An official who is part of a bureaucracy.]
Tending to creak.
(of mud, feces, makeup, etc.) Congealed into a cakelike consistency; (of something covered in such a material) Coated with such a congealed mass.
A number of places in the United States:
(architecture) Any of a series of hook-shaped decorative floral elements used in Gothic architecture.
(N)
an Australian online news outlet founded in 1999.
A surname from Irish.
Formed with, or having, a bend or crank.
Any of several birds of the family Rallidae that have short bills.
(of a sound) Like that of a frog.
(slang) crazy, mad
a 1981 animated short film produced, written and directed by Frédéric Back.
(countable) A native or inhabitant of Croatia; a person of Croatian ethnicity.
Intoxicated with cocaine.
Containing, or abounding in, creeks.
A closely-cropped haircut in which the hairs stick upward, like the short bristles of a brush.
Alternative spelling of crew cut. [A closely-cropped haircut in which the hairs stick upward, like the short bristles of a brush.]
Any member of the genus Carex of sedges.
smutty, muddy
A cylindrical roll of tobacco
Having crags
(slang) A crackhead.
Obsolete form of cruet. [A small bottle or container used to hold a condiment, such as salt, pepper, oil, or vinegar, for use at a dining table.]
corncrakes
Alternative form of crackow (“kind of shoe”). [A type of shoe worn in the Middle Ages, with a pointy pike.]
(historical) A kind of short coat or jacket worn by women.
(mineralogy) A rare red mineral; lead chromate, PbCrO₄.