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Words that sound like "friend" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
A person, typically someone other than a family member, spouse or lover, whose company one enjoys and towards whom one feels affection.
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(v)
(intransitive) To have a frown on one's face.
(botany) The leaf of a fern, especially a compound leaf.
(childish, Internet) Humorous alteration of "friend".
(N)
a series of civil wars in France in 1648 to 1653.
The foremost side of something or the end that faces the direction it normally moves.
The Quakers; the Society of Friends.
A short version of Frederick, Alfred, or Wilfred, also used as a formal male given name.
(intransitive) To take care of oneself; to take responsibility for one's own well-being.
(adj)
Having, or enclosed in, a frame
A female given name from the Germanic languages.
(Internet slang) A fellow, a friend.
Covered in ferns.
A sum or source of money.
Having fins, or a particular type of fins.
A small village in Powys, Wales (OS grid ref SO0965).
Possessing a fringe.
a Scandinavian (Norse) surname, derived from the name of the god Frey (Freyr) - same derivation as the day of the week (Tuesday -Tws
(colloquial) To tease, kid, poke fun at, make fun of.
(obsolete) A pound (unit of weight), in German contexts.
(philosophy, historical) The brain or mind.
(obsolete, Scotland, Ireland, Northern England) Having a specified form or disposition; fashioned.
A surname from French.
(transitive) To encounter or discover something being searched for; to locate.
To start (an institution or organization).
A very evil person.
(transitive) To chafe or irritate; to worry.
(law) The crime of stealing or otherwise illegally obtaining money by use of deception tactics.
Cooked by frying.
Having a liking or affection (for). [(chiefly) with of]
freed from bondage
A diminutive of the female given names Frances and Francine.
punished by the imposition of a penalty
Unravelled; worn at the end or edge.
Sigmund Freud, Austrian neurologist, psychotherapist, and founder of psychoanalysis.
Misspelling of fiend. [A devil or demon; a malignant or diabolical being; an evil spirit.]
To react, using fermentation; especially to produce alcohol by aging or by allowing yeast to act on sugars; to brew.
Brought into a more passionate or extreme state; invigorated.
Being a pretense, simulation, or counterfeit, or something false or fraudulent.
A diminutive of the female given names Frances, Francine, and Francesca.
Pronunciation spelling of afraid. [Impressed with fear or apprehension; in fear.]
A vitreous compound, used by potters in glazing, consisting of lime, silica, borax, lead, and soda.
A particular grade of wheat meal, commonly used as hot breakfast cereal in North America.
a masculine Croatian given name and a variant of Franciscus.
(slang) The drug fentanyl.
(transitive) To make firm or strong; fix securely.
(transitive, dialectal or obsolete) To ask, inquire.
A city and comune, the capital of the Metropolitan City of Florence and the region of Tuscany, Italy.
A surname from German.
A surname.
(Irish mythology) A fairy and the wife of Manannán mac Lir and later the lover of Cúchulainn.
(intransitive) To exhibit affection or attempt to please.
a masculine given name of French origin.
Alternative form of fremd. [(rare, chiefly dialectal) Strange, unusual, out of the ordinary; unfamiliar.]
A surname from Old French.
a Norwegian and Danish masculine given name.
a given name of Hungarian origin.
To have knowledge of beforehand.
(idiomatic) Synonym of free rein.
a German agricultural machinery manufacturer founded in 1930 by Xaver Fendt in Marktoberdorf, Allgäu region, Germany.
(cooking) Pertaining to servings of meat that have stylishly exposed bone protruding from them (meat with bones that have been French trimmed)
(anatomy) Synonym of frenulum.