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Words that sound like "develop" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
(transitive) To advance; to further; to promote the growth of.
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Archaic spelling of develop. [(transitive or impersonal, now rare) To discover, find out; to uncover.]
(adj)
(said of a country) wealthy and industrialized; not third-world.
(n)
(computing) A software developer; a person or company who creates or modifies computer software.
(informal) To divide up: to divide, particularly into separate shares for distribution.
A surname from Spanish, of Spanish or Galician origin
A surname.
To connect a computer to a modem.
In the process of development.
(obsolete) To rend apart.
(transitive) To convert a neighbourhood by demolishing old buildings and building new ones, or by renovating existing ones.
(transitive) To surround, enclose or enfold.
(transitive) To make public or known; to communicate to the public; to tell (information, especially a secret) so that it may become generally known.
(Scotland) Alternative spelling of devvel. [(transitive, Scotland) To hit (something) hard.]
(transitive, medicine) To pull apart forcibly.
vampire bats
A considerable lump, scoop, or quantity of something, especially soft food.
An ancient city in the province of Rome, Lazio, Italy.
(N)
a given name, a surname, Gotra of varied origins (Indian and French).
Alternative form of Diwali. [(Hinduism) An annual festival of light, observed during several days in October and November.]
(computing) Alternative spelling of dial-up. [(computing, of a connection to a network) Requiring a telephone number to be dialed.]
(computing) A network connection that requires a telephone number to be dialed.
(obsolete, East Anglia and Essex) A tuft or clump, especially an unploughed patch amongst fields of corn.
(transitive, intransitive, slang) To dress up finely or elaborately; to deck up. (often of ostentatious display)
(transitive) To divide, particularly into separate shares for distribution.
(theology) The chief devil; Satan.
A surname from French.
Mischief.
Alternative form of devilled. [grilled with a piquant sauce.]
(transitive) To double the quantity, amount or duration of something
grilled with a piquant sauce.
(UK, obsolete) The common swift.
the act of digging up something (especially a corpse) that has been buried
(countable) A tyre of the Dunlop brand.
A strong golden Flemish pale ale.
A surname from Italian.
(adv)
In a dingy manner.
A coastal commune in Honfleur-Deauville canton, Lisieux, Calvados department, Côte Fleurie, Lower Normandy, Normandy, France.
(transitive) To lower or remove the value of something.
(Hinduism) An annual festival of light, observed during several days in October and November.
A female given name originating as a coinage.
A surname from Spanish.
A topographic surname from French of French origin, for someone who lived in a valley.
In a divine manner.
A female given name from Sanskrit.
Not developed or used.
In a devout manner.
A city in Gedeo, Oromia, Ethiopia.
The largest city of Cameroon, situated on the west coast.
The pendulous skin under the neck of an ox, or a similar feature on any other animal.
A surname
(obsolete) A duel.
(transitive) To serve (cooked food); to take (food) from the oven, pots, etc. and put in dishes to be served at table.
(theology) Any law (or rule) that, in the opinion of believers, comes directly from the will of God (or a god).
Alternative spelling of duello [(obsolete) A duel.]
To become completely shriveled; to completely dry up and become wrinkled.
an alpine ski resort in the Wasatch Range, located east of Salt Lake City, in Park City, Utah, United States.
To develop to an excessive degree