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Words that sound like "cowardice" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
Lack of courage.
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A female given name originating as a coinage, of African-American usage.
A surname.
(v)
(transitive) To render (someone or something) cowardly, to cause to become a coward.
(adj)
Having no cord; especially using batteries instead of mains electricity.
A census-designated place in Allen Township, Ottawa County and Jerusalem Township, Lucas County, Ohio, United States.
A surname from Hungarian.
british filmmaker (born in hungary) (1893-1956)
(informal) A cardigan.
A spiral shape that symbolizes growth, strength and peace, used in Māori art.
(obsolete) cowardly
(prosody) A trochee.
A person who lacks courage.
A male given name transferred from the surname.
Having caries (bone or tooth decay); decayed, rotten.
A book bound in the modern manner, by joining pages, as opposed to a rolled scroll.
A surname from Spanish.
A female given name from Welsh.
An act of endearment; any act or expression of affection; an embracing, or touching, with tenderness.
Card games.
(music) A harmonic set of three or more notes that is heard as if sounding simultaneously.
(exercise) Exercise with the goal of raising the heart rate.
(informal) Corduroys.
(Internet) A shopping cart.
Possessing an official membership card;card-carrying.
A surname from Spanish, variant of Cortez
A line of people or things placed around an area to enclose or protect it. [from 16th c.]
A male given name, variant of Curtis.
(anatomy) The area of the stomach which directly receives contents from the esophagus.
A go-cart.
Fitted with a cord.
(Ancient Rome) A street that ran north–south, in an Ancient Roman town or city
Of, or like, cord; having cords or cord-like parts.
A garden grown inside of a car, usually in the dashboard.
(historical) A hooked ram for destroying walls.
(N)
a Ponzi scheme in Romania that was active between April 1992 and August 1994.
a genus of flowering plants in the borage family, Boraginaceae.
(countable) A long, thin, flexible length of twisted yarns (strands) of fibre (a rope, for example).
(uncountable) Cord (of any type) when viewed as a mass or commodity.
A region of Korean Peninsula, East Asia, Asia. North Korea and South Korea, collectively.
The larva of a caddis fly. They generally live in cylindrical cases, open at each end, and covered externally with debris.
(Polari) A penis.
A member of the phylum Chordata; numerous animals having a notochord at some stage of their development; in vertebrates this develops into the spine.
(archaic, medicine) deep coma or lethargy
french revolutionary heroine (a girondist) who assassinated marat (1768-1793)
A female given name from Ancient Greek.
(Greek mythology) One of the Hecatoncheires (hundred-handed monster) of Ancient Greek mythology.
The tree Eucalyptus diversicolor, native to south-western Western Australia.
An ethnic group from Ethiopia.
A city in Central Java, Indonesia, that serves as the capital of the regency.
(music) Composed of or containing chords.
an early Christian saint who is mentioned in the Bible.
A criminal who steals information from credit cards.
Alternative form of cartouche. [(architecture) An ornamental figure, often on an oval shield.]
A case for visiting cards
Cardea or Carda was the ancient Roman goddess of the hinge (Latin cardo, cardinis), Roman doors being hung on pivot hinges.
(historical) In Spain and Portugal, one who supports the constitution.
(medicine) An abnormal downward curve to the erect penis.
a genus of extinct gymnosperms, related to or actually representing the earliest conifers.
(countable) A business establishment that hosts card-playing, especially one where patrons play poker.
(anatomy) The great artery which carries the blood from the heart to all parts of the body except the lungs; the main trunk of the arterial system.