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Words that sound like "devour" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
(transitive) To eat quickly, greedily, hungrily, or ravenously.
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(n)
A surname from Irish.
(adj)
destroyed or wasted as if by eating
(N)
the stage name of Jeff Cancade, a Canadian electronic musician.
One who devours.
(obsolete) To disavow; to disclaim.
a hotels and leisure business, which until the 1990s was a brewing company known as Greenall's.
The legal dissolution of a marriage.
A rural neighbourhood of San Bernardino, California, United States, named after John Devore.
(archaic, often in plural) Duty, business; something that one must do.
A village and municipality of Innlandet, Norway, formerly part of the county of Oppland.
Someone who dives, especially as a sport.
(transitive) To use one’s intellect to plan or design (something).
A town, civil parish (with a town council) and major port in Kent, England, the closest point to France (OS grid ref TR3141).
Devoted to religion or to religious feelings and duties; pious; extremely religious; godly.
One who or that which divides or separates.
(arithmetic) In an expression involving division, the number by which another number is being divided.
(informal, transitive) To divide into portions.
One who foretells the future.
(transitive) To record (a broadcast) using a digital video recorder.
A surname.
A surname from Spanish.
one that defies
A person who devises something; a planner or inventor.
A municipality of Croatia.
(law) A testator.
A surname from French.
A worshipper.
The style of decoration of a room or building.
a French clothing retailer.
a given name, a surname, Gotra of varied origins (Indian and French).
Davao City (a city in the Davao Region, Mindanao, Philippines).
A disreputable or unglamorous bar.
(economics) Disfavoring increasing interest rates; inclined against increasing interest rates.
Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see do, for.
(figurative) To be uncertain or unable to make a decision; to vacillate, hesitate, or delay.
To want; to wish for earnestly.
Loved; lovable.
Any piece of equipment made for a particular purpose, especially a mechanical or electrical one.
A diversion or deviation from one's original route.
(transitive) To prevent something from happening.
to give one's time, focus one's efforts, commit oneself, etc. entirely for, on, or to a certain matter; to consecrate.
(transitive) To delay or postpone.
Completely without; having none of.
A diminutive of the male given name David.
A Welsh and English surname originating as a patronymic derived from the given name Davy/Davey/Davie or David.
A goddess in Vedic mythology, Hinduism and Buddhism.
(intransitive) Chiefly followed by to, and sometimes by at or on: to object or be reluctant; to balk, to take exception.
A region in western Sudan where the Fur live.
A town in Broward County, Florida, United States.
A god in Vedic mythology, Hinduism and Buddhism.
(obsolete, dialectal) Hurt; harm; injury.
(transitive) To take the virginity of (somebody), especially a woman or girl.
(Australia) A diminutive of the male given name David.
A surname transferred from the given name.
A surname from Marathi and a prominent group within the Maratha clan system.
Obsolete spelling of dear. [A very kind, loving person.]
A female given name.
(nematology) A developmental stage of certain nematode larvae in which they exhibit increased durability.
A surname from Dutch.
(transitive) To remove the vein-like colon from (shrimp).
A unit of surface area equal to 10 ares (that is, 1,000 square metres, 0.10 hectares, or approximately 0.25 acres)
Alternative form of daeva. [(Zoroastrianism) A supernatural entity of disagreeable nature, usually considered as a demon.]
Clothes to be worn in the daytime.
Obsolete form of deflower. [(transitive) To take the virginity of (somebody), especially a woman or girl.]