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Words that sound like "drop" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
(transitive) To let fall in drops.
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(intransitive) To lose all energy, enthusiasm or happiness; to flag.
(transitive) To cover or adorn with drapery or folds of cloth, or as with drapery.
(n)
(botany) a kind of fruit, with a fleshy exterior, formed from the exocarp and mesocarp, surrounding a hardened endocarp which protects the seed.
(Scotland) To drop.
Alternative form of trope (“cantillation pattern”). [(art, literature) Something recurring across a genre or type of art or literature; a motif.]
A surname from German.
(adj)
allowed to drop or fall.
(by extension) A dull or uninteresting appearance or situation, unremarkable.
(slang) To act stupidly or foolishly.
A utensil for dispensing a single drop of liquid at a time.
To dip or duck.
To defeat someone soundly; to annihilate or crush.
(business) Initialism of disaster recovery plan.
(medicine) Medicine to be administered to the eyes in the form of a drop of liquid.
(transitive) To cut off; chop off.
A surname.
Obsolete spelling of dropped; simple past and past participle of drop.
Alternative form of eyedrop. [(medicine) Medicine to be administered to the eyes in the form of a drop of liquid.]
(Australia, slang) An ineffectual or unattractive person; a dag.
A journey; an excursion or jaunt.
(chiefly in the plural) A group of soldiers; military forces.
(figurative, derogatory) Something foolish or valueless, especially written works and popular entertainment (movies, television).
A company of, often touring, actors, singers or dancers.
(art, literature) Something recurring across a genre or type of art or literature; a motif.
An English surname originating as an occupation derived from the occupation of trapper.
A town in Maryland.
(intransitive) To drag.
(physiology) The gradual increase in muscular contraction following rapidly repeated stimulation.
Senses relating to exerting force or pulling.
(fantasy roleplaying games, countable) A member of a fictional race of dark elves in various fantasy settings, such as Dungeons & Dragons.
Obsolete form of draught. [(British) A checker: a game piece used in the game of draughts.]
(law) The party directed to pay the amount of a draft or cheque.
(transitive) To compose (a document), especially following a standard form; prepare a plan.
(of distance or position; also figurative) Extending, reaching or positioned far from a point of reference, especially downwards.
(uncountable, slang) Any of various recreational substances:
A lower section of a road or geological feature.
A male given name from the Germanic languages.
A diminutive of the male given name Andre.
Heavy cloth hung over a window.
Alternative form of Draa. [A river in Morocco that starts from the High Atlas mountains and flows into the Atlantic Ocean.]
(originally) Elaborate handshake, especially hooking thumbs.
(informal) A deputy.
Covered by or clothed in cloth that drapes loosely around the object or body.
(historical) Any of various forms of low horse-drawn cart or wagon, often without sides or with removable sides, and used especially for heavy loads.
One who sells cloths; a dealer in cloths; a textile merchant.
(transitive) To bear or endure (something); to put up with, to suffer, to undergo.
(British) A squirrel’s nest, built of twigs in a tree.
(slang, chiefly Australia, New Zealand) To report (a person) to someone in authority for a wrongdoing.
Alternative form of dop (“cup in which diamond is cut”). [A diving bird.]
(nutrition) Initialism of Dietary Reference Intake; a set of nutritional reference values including RDA, EAR, AI, UL and AMDR.
Archaic spelling of dry. [Free from or lacking moisture.]
A coastal town in Seine-Maritime department, Normandy, France.
Initialism of dual in-line pin package.
A hamlet in Alberta, Canada.
(Scotland) The bottom end of something; the human buttocks.
A river in Morocco that starts from the High Atlas mountains and flows into the Atlantic Ocean.
A surname originating as a patronymic.
A surname from French.
Tending to form drape-like folds.
(N)
Derbe or Dervi, also called Derveia, was a city of Galatia in Asia Minor, and later of Lycaonia, and still later of Isauria and Cappadocia.
a large genus of flowering plants in the family Brassicaceae, commonly known as whitlow-grasses (though they are not related to the true grasses).
(of a liquid) Dripping.
a commune in the Eure-et-Loir department in northern France.