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Words that sound like "glide" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
(intransitive) To move softly, smoothly, or effortlessly.
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(adj)
Pleased; happy; gratified.
(n)
An open passage through a wood; a grassy open or cleared space in a forest.
affixed or as if affixed with glue or paste
(intransitive) To emit heat and light without a flame.
The action or motion of something that glides.
(archaic, transitive) To make glad.
Alternative form of glede (“live coal”). [Any of several birds of prey, especially a kite, Milvus milvus.]
Alternative form of glede. [Any of several birds of prey, especially a kite, Milvus milvus.]
A surname.
Any of several birds of prey, especially a kite, Milvus milvus.
An American organization focusing on the inclusive portrayal of LGBT people in the media.
To exhibit a conspicuous (sometimes malevolent) pleasure or sense of self-satisfaction, often at an adversary's misfortune.
Any heavier-than-air aircraft optimised for unpowered flight; a sailplane.
An excess, too much.
(exercise, colloquial) A gluteal muscle.
Abbreviation of guilder. [The former currency unit in the Netherlands, divided into 100 cents.]
(vulgar, slang) A urethral discharge, especially as a symptom of gonorrhea.
(obsolete) To sulk; to be sulky; to pout.
Fitted with or attached to a guy.
A visible mass of water droplets suspended in the air.
(of a person, preceded by a garment type) Wearing clothing or some other covering (for example, an armour) on the body; clothed, dressed.
A lump of something, especially earth or clay.
having claws (of animals)
(countable) A male given name from Latin.
Joined as allies.
A male given name from Latin.
To provide someone with information which they lack (often used with "in" or "up").
(systematics) A group of animals or other organisms derived from a common ancestor species.
To leave out or omit (something).
blocked up
Containing clay.
(nautical, transitive, intransitive) to raise the lower corner(s) of (a sail)
(uncountable) Joy; happiness; great delight, especially from one's own good fortune or from another's misfortune.
Having a glaze (a coating).
(Scotland) A greedy person
(intransitive) To shine, especially in an indistinct or intermittent manner; to glisten, to glitter.
(intransitive) To stare angrily.
The Everglades.
(intransitive) To move from one location to another in an apparently random and frivolous manner.
Initialism of Greek-letter organization (such as an honor society or a college fraternity or sorority).
A disease caused by coenurosis of the brain, most commonly found in sheep and canids.
Wearing a glove or gloves.
Any of various fish of the cod family found in British waters; especially those of the genera Gadus and Motella.
Initialism of Greater London Authority.
Obsolete form of glue. [A hard gelatin made by boiling bones and hides, used in solution as an adhesive; or any sticky adhesive substance.]
(nonstandard, proscribed, rare) Alternative form of gladden. [(transitive) To cause (something) to become more glad.]
(literary) Very cold; icy or frosty.
Having glades.
(historical) A weapon consisting of a pole with a large blade fixed on the end, the edge of which is on the outside curve.
A cheap showy trinket
(anatomy) The network of glial cells that supports nervous system tissue.
(intransitive) To look or feel sad, sullen or despondent.
(N)
(stylized in all caps) a Japanese rock band formed in Hakodate in 1988.
(obsolete) A gown.
(soil science) A type of hydric soil, sticky, greenish-blue-grey in colour and low in oxygen.
Enclosed in a globe.
To slide.
(intransitive, informal) To grab hold of, seize; catch, grab or latch onto.
Egg white, especially as used in various industrial preparations.
Alternative spelling of ged (“The European pike”). [(UK, dialect or heraldry) The pike or luce.]