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Words that sound like "frigid" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Very cold; lacking warmth; icy.
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(n)
A flood resulting from heavy rain or a spring thaw.
A surname from French.
A modern type of warship, equivalent in size or smaller than a destroyer, often focused on anti-submarine warfare, but sometimes general purpose.
(informal) A refrigerator.
(historical) A geographic region and ancient kingdom in the west central part of Asia Minor, in what is now modern-day Turkey.
(v)
To add frit to a glass or ceramic mixture
(intransitive) To wiggle or twitch; to move the body, especially the fingers, around nervously or idly.
(intransitive) To become fresh.
Alternative form of fishhead. [The head of a fish.]
(astronomy) 77 Frigga, a main belt asteroid.
(ambitransitive, slang, euphemistic, mildly vulgar) To fuck; to have sex.
Stiff, rather than flexible.
(figurative) lively, spirited, or frenzied due to being ardent, passionate, and zealous.
Any flowering plant of the genus Freesia, native to South Africa.
A female given name from Irish, equivalent to English Bridget, sometimes borrowed from Irish.
Possessing a fringe.
(N)
a Scandinavian (Norse) surname, derived from the name of the god Frey (Freyr) - same derivation as the day of the week (Tuesday -Tws
Having frills, frilly.
To search for and gather food for animals, particularly cattle and horses.
(now historical) Trademark for a refrigerator.
frizzy
(idiomatic) An opportunity or benefit which has no cost, especially one enjoyed or undertaken at the expense of others.
(adv)
In a frigid manner; coldly; icily.
(obsolete) Rotten from being too ripe; overripe.
(obsolete, transitive) To make cool.
(music, of a musical instrument) Having frets.
Scintillant, coruscant; marked by fleeting flashes of radiant light.
A person, typically someone other than a family member, spouse or lover, whose company one enjoys and towards whom one feels affection.
A short version of Frederick, Alfred, or Wilfred, also used as a formal male given name.
Newly produced or obtained; recent.
(countable, colloquial, US, Philippines) A freshman.
A female given name from the Germanic languages.
(finance) the optimal date to exercise an American option (or a Bermudan option)
(rare) frightened; afraid; affright
Containing fruit; bearing fruit.
(transitive) To alter something from its true state, as to hide a flaw or uncertainty, deliberately but not necessarily dishonestly or immorally.
A rush of water, along a river or onto the land; a flood.
A surname.
(childish, Internet) Humorous alteration of "friend".
(also figurative) Loaded with cargo; charged.
cut recently
food which has not been preserved and has not spoiled yet.
(transitive) (nautical, obsolete) To load (a boat, ship, or other vessel) with cargo.
(slang) A fledgling member of the skinhead subculture.
(zoology) Any hermaphroditic wormlike marine animal of the phylum Phoronida.
A surname of Iberian origin.
(US military slang) The premeditated murder of one's superior officer in a military unit
Having ornamental stripes or workings of braid or lace, usually on the breast of a uniform coat.
Easily broken, not sturdy; of delicate material.
(law) The crime of stealing or otherwise illegally obtaining money by use of deception tactics.
(of clothing) Tailored to the shape of a person's body.
freed from bondage
Extreme or intense.
Having, or enclosed in, a frame
A female given name from Irish.
Unravelled; worn at the end or edge.
Sigmund Freud, Austrian neurologist, psychotherapist, and founder of psychoanalysis.
A female given name from Old Norse of mostly British usage.
Pronunciation spelling of afraid. [Impressed with fear or apprehension; in fear.]
(intransitive, derogatory) To exploit the generosity of others without giving anything in return.
Having fissures.
(German for "freedom") a 1966 short film by George Lucas, made while he was a student at the University of Southern California's film school.
(idiomatic) Synonym of free rein.
(sports) To take part in a sport, such as skiing or snowboarding, on natural terrain and without set goals or rules.
Gottlob Frege, a German mathematician and philosopher.
(astronomy) 76 Freia, a main belt asteroid.
A surname from Italian.
(UK, dialect) crabbed; peevish
Fortified with a fraise (palisade).
(idiomatic) To search for by rummaging, and then extract (an item from e.g. a container); to obtain.
(intransitive) To undergo fission.