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Words that sound like "elated" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Extremely happy and excited; delighted; pleased, euphoric.
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Alate.
(v)
(transitive) To separate one substance from another by means of a solvent; to wash; to cleanse.
Standing in relation or connection.
Later in relation to the proper time something should have happened.
(transitive) To evade or escape from (someone or something), especially by using cunning or skill.
given as a task
(transitive) To assign or designate as a task or for a purpose.
To set light to (something); to set (something) on fire; to ignite, to light.
unlucky; doomed.
To carry or bring against, as a charge; to inform against.
(chemistry, of a metal atom) bound with one or more chelates
Greatly pleased.
(n)
One who is elected.
Having been deleted or eliminated; absent from the final version.
(transitive, formal) To wait for.
That has had something added in order to dilute it.
(chiefly US) scheduled
A famous ancient Greek epic poem about the Trojan War, attributed to Homer.
(intransitive) To refer to something indirectly or by suggestion; to invoke it by implication rather than mention.
(transitive) To examine diverse documents and so on, to discover similarities and differences.
removed or taken away by cutting or erosion or melting or evaporation
(transitive, intransitive) To stimulate the penis or scrotum using the mouth.
Having undergone dilation; enlarged.
(intransitive, of an object or substance) To be supported by a fluid of greater density (than the object).
Served on a plate.
Coagulated
Having a slit or slits.
(intransitive) To flee, to escape, to speed away.
To move about rapidly and nimbly.
Having flutes or grooves, either for decoration or to trim weight.
(transitive) To interweave the strands or locks of; to braid
Patched; roughly mended.
To strengthen with a cleat.
Having no variations in height.
Of or pertaining to a slat; having slats.
Inspired, especially divinely.
(impersonal, of the weather) To be in a state in which sleet is falling.
(UK, slang) Gutted; very disappointed or let down.
having a billet
To leave out or omit (something).
(grammar) Of, or relating to the grammatical case that in some languages indicates motion towards or into something.
(zoology) Having a crest covering the pileum.
(ambitransitive) To light or kindle anew.
Unable to read and write.
Made unclean or impure.
Filled with air or fluid
(transitive) To make joyful or proud.
(originally poker, video games, chess, slang) In a state of frustration and worsened performance resulting from a series of losses.
(obsolete) Belated; too late; also, overtaken by night; delayed.
(transitive) To send out or give off.
Treated as unimportant or not worthy of attention.
(software engineering) An abstract quality that good software should exhibit.
To address, as with expressions of kind wishes and courtesy; to greet; to hail.
To exhibit a conspicuous (sometimes malevolent) pleasure or sense of self-satisfaction, often at an adversary's misfortune.
(transitive) To express contempt for (laws, rules, etc.) by word or action.
Having slots.
exceeding demand
Supplied or infused with air or oxygen.
(of birds) Capable of flight.
To kill as a sacrifice by burning.
A female given name.
(zoology) An elaterid, or click beetle.
A female given name from the Germanic languages.
(adv)
In an elated manner
Having a volute, or spiral scroll.
(zoology) Any of many species of snakes of the family Elapidae, including the cobras, mambas, and coral snakes
(transitive) To serve (someone) as a valet.
A town and municipality in Skåne County, southern Sweden.
(transitive) To impregnate (the roe of a fish) with milt.
Disliked; odious; reviled.
Filled with water from rain or rivers.
Containing blots
Of a sheep or goat, to make its characteristic cry of baas; of a human, to mimic this sound.
A female given name from Spanish.
(N)
This name should not be confused with the name Aelita.
(in combination) Having a particular gait.
A blemish, spot or stain made by a coloured substance.
(of text) Set off by bullet points.
(cartography, astronomy, surveying) A type of sighting device used for measuring angles.
Eliud, also known as Elihud, was a legendary king of the Britons, as recounted by Geoffrey of Monmouth.
(of a person, preceded by a garment type) Wearing clothing or some other covering (for example, an armour) on the body; clothed, dressed.
washed clean
A surname from Italian.
Archaic form of alidade. [(cartography, astronomy, surveying) A type of sighting device used for measuring angles.]
To talk inconsiderately; blab.