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Words that sound like "fleeting" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Passing quickly; of short duration.
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That floats or float.
Brief, likely to be of short duration.
(n)
The act by which something is flouted.
(architecture, sculpture) A decoration consisting of parallel, normally vertical, flutes (grooves) incised into the surface.
The act of flying.
(New Zealand) The practice of living, with others, in a flat.
An area of level ground (sometimes covered with shallow or tidal water).
Alternative form of flyting. [Contention, noisy argument.]
A poetic contest of insults or invective.
A flirtation.
The act of one who flees.
An act of flooding; a flood or gush.
(UK, dialect) A mixture of buttermilk and boiling whey; curds.
(v)
(transitive) To make something flat or flatter.
A surname.
(N)
the name of an early treatise on the common law of England.
A small village and civil parish (without a council) in Mid Suffolk district, Suffolk, England (OS grid ref TM0846).
The act or process of contending; violence or conflict.
That flies or can fly.
Moving, proceeding or shaped smoothly, gracefully, or continuously.
The blinking of a light source, such as a light bulb or computer's cursor.
Appropriate; suitable.
(uncountable) The act or process of giving food.
A ground for the foot; place for the foot to rest on; firm foundation to stand on.
Rapid back-and-forth waving or oscillation.
Gratifying to one's self-esteem; complimentary.
The act by which something is flaunted.
(uncountable) A specialized animal tissue with high lipid content, used for long-term storage of energy: fat tissue.
The act by which something is flayed.
The act, or the result of making something flat or flatter
The motion of something that flitters.
A confidence trick.
The process of attaching fins, such as halved feathers, to a projectile in order to stabilize its flight.
Carrying more fat than usual on one's body; plump; not lean or thin.
The soft tissue of the body, especially muscle and fat.
A defect, fault, or imperfection, especially one that is hidden.
Fillets collectively.
(transitive, intransitive) To stimulate the penis or scrotum using the mouth.
(obsolete) To fetch.
The flank or side of an animal, now almost exclusively a pig when cured and salted; a side of bacon.
(British, dialectal, obsolete) In a thatched building: a light covering of reeds, over which the main covering is laid.
arrive in great numbers
(aviation) The total amount of time spent piloting aircraft, serving as the primary measure of a pilot's experience.
Alternative form of flotage. [The state of floating.]
making lively and joyful
(impersonal, of the weather) To be in a state in which sleet is falling.
An action or arrangement in which something is pleated.
A protrusion on the bottom of a shoe or wheel meant for better traction.
(transitive) To separate one substance from another by means of a solvent; to wash; to cleanse.
A type of fried cylindrical tortilla or taco.
A hill in Northumberland, near the border between England and Scotland, where a battle was fought between the two countries in 9 September 1513.
(common name timothy) a genus of annual and perennial plants in the grass family.
a benign side effect of some antibiotics; dark overgrowth of the papillae of the tongue
a small island in Orkney, Scotland, lying in Scapa Flow.
The process by which something fades; gradual diminishment.
A group of vessels or vehicles.
On fire with visible flames.
Abstinence or mortification for religious reasons, especially abstinence from food.
The act of one who farts; a sound like a fart.
that flaps or flap
A feast, or an occasion on which people or animals feast
(slang, vulgar, sex) The act or sexual practice of inserting one or both hands into the vagina or rectum of one's sexual partner.
Having a lack of coordination, control, or successful outcome.
A native or inhabitant of Flanders in Belgium.
Becoming tired or less dynamic; declining in strength; dwindling.
Breaking or tending to break into flakes.
Participation in feuds.
A noise that bleats.
(intransitive, figurative) To be or become of a like type with others; (especially) to be or become socially accepted.
(chiefly Scotland) The hiring of servants for a fee
(uncountable) Gas generated in the digestive tract.
(colloquial) Alternative form of fitting. [(informal, US, with infinitive) Getting ready; preparing.]
Formation of a geological fault.
(adv)
in a fleeting manner; transiently
In a fleet manner; swiftly
(transitive) To care for a young bird until it is capable of flight.
The production of felt from wool.
(slang) A flat tire/tyre.
A member of a fleet.
two Arabic unisex given names, and .
(Canada, US) A publicist, a publicity agent.
(informal) A flatmate.
introduce continuously
Somewhat flat, in any comparable sense of the word.
A flecked pattern.
(obsolete) scorn; derision