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Words that sound like "frown" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
A wrinkling of the forehead with the eyebrows brought together, typically indicating displeasure, severity, or concentration.
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A diminutive of the female given names Frances and Francine.
A small village in Powys, Wales (OS grid ref SO0965).
(N)
a masculine Croatian given name and a variant of Franciscus.
(Internet slang) A fellow, a friend.
(v)
(transitive, dialectal or obsolete) To ask, inquire.
A surname from Old French.
(philosophy, historical) The brain or mind.
A surname.
The SQL From clause is the source of a rowset to be operated upon in a Data Manipulation Language statement.
(transitive) To fit, as for a specific end or purpose; make suitable or comfortable; adapt; adjust.
(intransitive) To have a frown on one's face.
A woman; a wife, especially a Dutch or German one.
Initialism of ferroelectric random access memory.
A town and civil parish with a town council in Somerset, England, previously in Mendip district (OS grid ref ST7848).
(slightly dated) Used as a courtesy title before the surname of a (typically married) German-speaking woman.
(adj)
Flourishing; thriving
(Judaism) Pious, observant; committed to obeying all the laws of Judaism.
(informal or childish) Frowning.
Alternative form of fremd. [(rare, chiefly dialectal) Strange, unusual, out of the ordinary; unfamiliar.]
One who frowns.
Parts of clothing made from fur.
(Thailand) A foreigner in Thailand who is of Western ancestry; one who comes to Thailand from a Western country.
(boatbuilding) Alternative form of furring. [Parts of clothing made from fur.]
To gather into or adorn with plaits, as a dress.
A young deer.
(Roman mythology) A woodland creature with pointed ears, legs, and short horns of a goat and a fondness for unrestrained revelry.
(botany) The leaf of a fern, especially a compound leaf.
(organic chemistry) Any of several nonflammable refrigerants based on halogenated hydrocarbon including R-12, R-22, and R-23.
A chieftain or king of a region of Cameroon.
a masculine given name of French origin.
a series of civil wars in France in 1648 to 1653.
A surname from Welsh.
(anatomy) In vertebrates, especially mammals, the forehead; the part of the cranium between the orbits and the vertex.
(dated, fandom slang, often derogatory) A fan who is more interested in fandom than in the subject of that fandom.
Alternative spelling of foehn. [A warm dry wind blowing down the north sides of the Alps, especially in Switzerland.]
(heraldry) A bearing representing the head of a dart or javelin, with long barbs which are engrailed on the inner edge.
(archaic, poetic) Frozen; intensely cold; frosty.
To make a false show or pretence of; to counterfeit or simulate.
A type of wetland fed by ground water and runoff, containing peat below the waterline, characteristically alkaline.
(transitive, slang) To want something obsessively; to have a strong desire (for).
Glad, contented, or satisfied to do something in the absence of a better alternative.
A surname from Hebrew.
A temple or sacred place.
A municipality of A Coruña, Galicia, Spain.
A particular grade of wheat meal, commonly used as hot breakfast cereal in North America.
Eron Santos Lourenço (born 17 January 1992), better known as Eron is a Brazilian football player who plays as a left back.
A male given name from Spanish.
A surname from Irish.
A surname from French.
A surname from Middle English.
Obsolete spelling of fain. [(chiefly UK, dialectal, or poetic) Often followed by of: glad, well-pleased.]
an English, German and Jewish surname.