Show me
of
Words that sound like "fish" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
(countable) A typically cold-blooded vertebrate animal that lives in water, moving with the help of fins and breathing with gills.
Relevance: 0%
A phishing attack.
A polecat, such as the European polecat (Mustela putorius), the striped polecat, steppe polecat, or black-footed polecat of America.
(adj)
(slang) Fashionable.
(v)
(obsolete, dialectal, Scotland) To fidget; jostle or shake.
a microfiche
(transitive, ditransitive) To retrieve; to bear towards; to go and get.
(chiefly uncountable) A type of very sweet candy or confection, usually made from sugar, butter, and milk or cream.
A surname.
Exhibiting qualities of both femme and butch identities.
(uncountable) A strong, unpleasant emotion or feeling caused by actual or perceived danger or threat.
Suitable; proper
(transitive, ergative) To make full
A carbonated beverage, especially champagne.
A short form of the male given name Philip.
A person who catches fish, especially for a living or for sport; a person engaging in the pastime of fishing.
(figurative) Suspicious; inspiring doubt.
A long, narrow crack or opening made by breaking or splitting, especially in rock or earth.
(US) Alternative form of feist (“a feist dog”). [(US, countable) A small, snappy, belligerent mixed-breed dog; a feist dog.]
(rare) Containing or loaded with fish.
Obsolete form of fizz. [(intransitive) To emit bubbles.]
A county of Albania.
A Nordic dairy product, similar to yogurt, but using different bacteria which give a different taste and texture.
(ski) International Ski Federation
(transitive, nonstandard) To split apart into multiple entities.
a young woman
(microbiology, virology) A virus that is parasitic on bacteria.
A surname from Middle English.
A surname from German [in turn originating as an occupation].
(mathematics) The golden ratio.
(informal) Aloof, standoffish.
(Ireland) Irish potato bread; a flat farl, griddle-baked, often served fried.
Characteristic of or resembling an oaf; clumsy, stupid.
Obsolete form of fit. [Suitable; proper]
An unfriendly or suspicious glance.
(computing) Abbreviation of physical unit of information transfer.
(chiefly Britain, colloquial) The face.
(music) A method of classifying singers, primarily opera singers, according to the range, weight, and color of their voices.
Obsolete form of fere (“consort or spouse”). [(dialectal or obsolete) A companion, comrade or friend.]
Initialism of family interference with work.
A written or printed notice to be posted, as on a wall; a poster; a placard.
(archaic or dialectal) Alternative spelling of fere (“companion, friend, mate”). [(dialectal or obsolete) A companion, comrade or friend.]
Obsolete form of fit (“section of a poem or ballad”). [The degree to which something fits.]
A person who engages in phishing attacks.
Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see fish, eye.
A form of phishing using a telephone call to the prospective victim.
(historical) A Native American tribe from present-day eastern Texas, part of the Caddo Confederacy.
Unblemished (figuratively or literally); clean and pure; innocent.
(transitive) To make something fall; especially to chop down a tree.
The soft tissue of the body, especially muscle and fat.
(countable) Money paid for a transport ticket.
A felt hat in the shape of a truncated cone, having a flat top with a tassel attached.
(genetics) A gene responsible for encoding proto-oncogene tyrosine-protein kinase FER.
To confess; to admit.
(obsolete) To fetch.
(Early Modern) Obsolete spelling of fair. [Something which is fair (in various senses of the adjective).]
(Scotland, obsolete) A border or fringe.
A surname from German.
(dialectal or obsolete) A companion, comrade or friend.
Initialism of free-for-all [(idiomatic) Chaos; a chaotic situation lacking rules or control.]
Alternative spelling of fess (“horizontal band in heraldry”). [(heraldry) A horizontal band across the middle of the shield.]
(adv)
(dialectal or obsolete) greatly, much, very
Alternative spelling of flèche. [(fencing) To attack using the flèche method.]