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Words that sound like "encourage" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
To mentally support; to motivate, give courage, hope or spirit.
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(adj)
Having been given hope or encouragement.
(n)
(nautical) A harbor, river, or offshore area that can accommodate a ship at anchor, either for quarantine, queuing, or discharge.
(transitive) To make (someone or something) rich or richer. [from 14th c.]
(transitive) To fill with rage; to outrage; to provoke to frenzy; to make furious.
(intransitive) To intrude unrightfully on someone else’s rights or territory.
To lock inside a cage; to imprison.
acquiring or coming into something (usually undesirable)
(sometimes derogatory) Ungrammatical, unorthographical or nonsensical English of the kind found in East Asia, notably in Japan.
An unincorporated community in Mitchell County, Georgia, United States.
A brief extra performance, done after the main performance is complete.
A minor city in Wabaunsee County, Kansas, United States, named after Charles V. Eskridge.
An area of land measured in acres.
A city in Lane County, Oregon, United States.
A city in Anderson County and Roane County, Tennessee.
One who provides encouragement.
(transitive) To engross or hold the attention of; to keep busy or occupied.
Giving courage, confidence or hope; auspicious.
action of the verb to enter
To take out of or release from a cage.
A surname.
(N)
a river of Picardy, France.
Alternative form of encage. [To lock inside a cage; to imprison.]
Obsolete spelling of increase. [An amount by which a quantity is increased.]
(intransitive, chiefly law) To take effect, to be operative; used with to.
The act or means by which something is anchored or made firm.
A city in Jefferson County, Iowa, United States.
A village in the Scottish Borders council area, Scotland (OS grid ref NT6224).
A crowding or flooding in.
(transitive) To bring upon oneself or expose oneself to, especially something inconvenient, harmful, or onerous; to become liable or subject to.
(intransitive) (of a quantity, etc.) To become larger or greater, to greaten.
Angered, made furious, made full of rage.
Misspelling of occurring, present participle of occur.
Below the legal age (usually age 18) for some activity, such as consuming alcohol or engaging in sexual intercourse.
An instance of something occurring; an event or happening.
Characterized by a lack of care; not caring.
A heavy release of blood within or from the body.
To conceal information by means of a code or cipher.
(transitive, intransitive) To straighten out from being curled up.
The capital city of Turkey and the capital of Ankara Province.
A beige colour.
British standard spelling of hemorrhage.
To agree (in action or opinion); to have a common opinion; to coincide; to correspond.
(often figurative) consistently accurate; not missing a target.
(obsolete) Scouting.
A postulated physical or biochemical change in neural tissue that represents a memory.
Of, relating to, within, or by way of the intestines.
Alternative form of earsh. [(archaic) stubble field.]
A forceful rush or flow forward.
A relatively small group of people thought to be fashionable or popular.
(transitive) To move something, especially one's arms or legs, from a crossed position.
(transitive) Hypothetically, to reverse the act of ringing, or the consequences of the action.
One who encroaches.
The motion or action of something that uncurls.
(colloquial) An intense and typically nonsexual feeling of attraction toward and admiration for a man.
To deprive of the monarchy or other authority or status.
Alternative spelling of in crowd. [A relatively small group of people thought to be fashionable or popular.]
One who enriches.
Abbreviation of increase. [An amount by which a quantity is increased.]
To remove from a crate.
(rhetoric) Transformation from one grammatically correct form to another.
(transitive) To cause to thrill.
A metal or wooden frame on which a piece of ordnance is mounted for firing or transportation.
(intransitive) To curve inwards.
(transitive) To remove a curse from.
A miserly person; a person with an excessive dislike of spending money or other resources.
(uncountable) A type of candy made from that plant's dried root or its extract.
conformity with law or custom or practice etc.
(slang) triumph or domination
Eager; craving; urged by desire; eager to taste or enjoy; greedy.
(obsolete) Lecherous.
(transitive) To cause such a feeling of antagonism in.
British, Canadian, Commonwealth, and Ireland standard spelling of honor.
To scratch so as to relieve an itch or irritation.
Equipment used for rowing.
A habitational surname from Old English.
Resembling an ogre; cruel and wicked.
Alternative spelling of ogreish. [Resembling an ogre; cruel and wicked.]
frogs, toads, tree toads
(idiomatic) The courage or bravado induced by alcohol.