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Words that sound like "explode" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
(intransitive) To fly apart with sudden violent force; to blow up, to burst, to detonate, to go off.
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(n)
Someone or something that explodes.
(transitive) To make plain, manifest, or intelligible; to clear of obscurity; to illustrate the meaning of.
(transitive) To use (something) to someone's advantage, such as one's own benefit or a society's benefit.
(adj)
Having undergone exploration.
A dark brownish-red colour.
(humorous) To explode.
(transitive) To travel somewhere in search of discovery.
(usually followed by to) Open (especially to something), unconcealed and/or unprotected (and therefore vulnerable, susceptible).
(transitive) To increase the extent, number, volume or scope of (something).
Having been subjected to an explosion; blown up.
(figurative) Having the appearance of an explosion.
(transitive) To eject.
(transitive) To consume, exhaust (some resource).
An expatriate; a person temporarily residing in a foreign nation, usually a poorer one, often for an occupation, training, or education.
One who exploits.
(ambitransitive) To predict or believe that something will happen
(transitive) To reveal, uncover, make visible, bring to light, introduce (to).
that is no longer valid
(transitive) To go beyond (some limit); to surpass; to be longer than.
Spread open to view; shown off.
(intransitive) To collapse or burst inward violently.
(transitive) To bar (someone or something) from entering; to keep out.
An exposition (type of public exhibition).
of persons; taken advantage of
(intransitive) To be much better than others.
(transitive, intransitive, computing) To transfer data to a computer on a network, especially to a server on the Internet.
(transitive) To set out the meaning of; to explain or discuss at length.
(ambitransitive) To atone or make reparation for.
be good at
(transitive) To play incorrectly or poorly.
A knife pleat when arranged back to back with others.
A violent release of energy (sometimes mechanical, nuclear, or chemical); an act or instance of exploding.
A person who by means of travel (notably an expedition) searches out new information.
Able to, or likely to, explode.
(transitive) To stir the emotions of; to cause to feel excitement.
(transitive, intransitive) To express approval (of something) by clapping the hands.
(intransitive) To lapse and become invalid.
Very specific, clear, or detailed.
In a job; working.
Put into practical use.
Suggested without being stated directly; implicated or hinted at.
(transitive) To exclude; to specify as being an exception.
(transitive) To praise; to make high.
(transitive) To erase or strike out.
(transitive) To find out or observe (someone or something, especially if not easy to see) by spying or looking; to catch sight of; to see; to spot.
One who or that which expands.
A female given name from the Celtic languages or the Germanic languages.
(chiefly journalism) A guide that explains a topic.
(N)
an American drama television miniseries created and directed by Lulu Wang, based on the 2016 novel The Expatriates by Janice Y. K. Lee.
(obsolete) To expel, usually by means of violence.
Exploitative: taking advantage of someone
A surname from Old English.
(obsolete) departure; exodus, especially the exodus of the Israelites from Egypt
One who, or that which, expends.
to expound
(transitive) To cut off.
(fandom slang) A character in a work of fiction who is a stand-in for or knockoff of a character from an unrelated work or of a real person.
An incubator for a new-born baby.
(obsolete) To explore.
(law) to sue in court, raise an action against a defendant
(programming) A property added to an object at run-time.
Abbreviation of export. [(countable) Something that is exported.]