Show me
of
Words that sound like "feast" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
A very large meal, often of a ceremonial nature.
Relevance: 0%
(adj)
(dated) Firmly or securely fixed in place; stable.
A hand with the fingers clenched or curled inward.
(slang) drunk
(in combination) A gathering for a specified reason or occasion.
(UK, informal, chiefly in the negative) Bothered; concerned.
A magician and alchemist of German lore who sold his soul to the Devil for knowledge and power.
(US, countable) A small, snappy, belligerent mixed-breed dog; a feist dog.
(v)
(transitive) To force another to accept especially by stealth or deceit; to stick.
A strong musty smell; mustiness.
A surname.
To confess; to admit.
(N)
a fictional character in William Shakespeare's comedy Twelfth Night.
(obsolete) Fact; performance; feat.
Preceding all others of a series or kind; the ordinal of one; earliest.
A relatively rare or difficult accomplishment.
Digested waste material (typically solid or semi-solid) discharged from a human or other mammal's stomach to the intestines; excrement.
Having a fleece.
One who feasts, who attends a feast.
Alternative form of Fiote (“language”). [(historical) The local vernacular spoken by black people in Cabinda.]
(music) Initialism of Virtual Studio Technology.
(anatomy) The front part of the head of a human or other animal, featuring the eyes, nose, and mouth, and the surrounding area.
The presumed cause, force, principle, or divine will that predetermines events.
Carrying more fat than usual on one's body; plump; not lean or thin.
One who fasts, or voluntarily refrains from eating.
(transitive) To give (someone or something) food to eat.
(Canada, US) An exposed plumbing fitting; a tap or spigot; a regulator for controlling the flow of a liquid from a reservoir.
A surname from German.
Any one of the flat surfaces cut into a gem.
(chiefly in the negative) Hesitant, frightened; daunted, disconcerted; perturbed, put off.
A surname from Old English from places in England derived from Old English words for “colourful slope”.
a DNA and protein sequence alignment software package first described by David J. Lipman and William R. Pearson in 1985.
A surname from Italian.
(materials science) Initialism of fracture appearance transition temperature.
(obsolete) Having a head of hair; hairy.
(transitive) To erase (as anything impressed or inscribed upon a surface); to render illegible or indiscernible.
(now dialect and US) A state of worry or alarm.
(US) A male given name transferred from the surname or place name.
A suburb of Whitworth, Rossendale borough, Lancashire, England (OS grid ref SD8819).
a given name and surname.
General appearance.
Alternative form of fess (“horizontal band, in heraldry”). [(heraldry) A horizontal band across the middle of the shield.]
Records or registers of important events (outside the dominion of Ancient Rome)
Having faith of a specified quality or type.
Stuffed or filled; swollen.
(glassmaking) A wire basket on the end of a rod to carry glass bottles, etc., to the annealing furnace.
Flavia Maxima Fausta Augusta (died 326 AD) was a Roman empress.
Initialism of find as you type. [Synonym of search as you type.]
Dated form of facet. [Any one of the flat surfaces cut into a gem.]
A surname from Sicilian.
To carry off by bold looks; to see something unpleasant through with courage and spirit.
(archaic) Facetious.
(slang) To make something fascist.