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Words that sound like "glimmer" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
(intransitive) To shine with a faint, unsteady light.
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(adj)
Despondent; moody; sullen.
(n)
(uncountable) Alluring beauty or charm (often with sex appeal).
(American spelling, uncommon) Alternative spelling of glamour. [(transitive) To enchant; to bewitch.]
A cosmetic product used to impart a gleam or shine to part of the face.
(dated, slang) To illuminate.
One who gleans.
(archaic, slang) A light; a candle; a lantern; a fire.
Glimmering; shimmery.
(Northern English dialect) A ewe between one and two years old.
A surname.
Glimmering; gleaming or shining.
A great outcry or vociferation; loud and continued shouting or exclamation.
Someone or something that climbs (such as a mountain climber).
(transitive, obsolete) To salute loudly.
(informal) An emotionally clingy person.
A person who makes a claim; a claimant.
One who digs for clams.
(intransitive) To stare angrily.
Egg white, especially as used in various industrial preparations.
A cow or sheep etc. that has lost all of its teeth.
(archaic or dialectal) gloomy
One who mines for gems.
Alternative form of glair. [Egg white, especially as used in various industrial preparations.]
A depressing, despondent, or melancholic atmosphere.
To sparkle with light; to shine with a brilliant and broken light or showy luster; to gleam.
Suffering from gloom; melancholy; dejected.
(intransitive) To shine, especially in an indistinct or intermittent manner; to glisten, to glitter.
A person who plays any kind of game.
(slang) Glamorous.
(intransitive) To look or stare with anger.
(dialectal) Fat, fatty; corpulent.
(dialectal) To glow, shine.
(intransitive) To begin to grow dark; to grow dusky.
(intransitive, informal) To grab hold of, seize; catch, grab or latch onto.
(slang, derogatory) A stupid, awkward, or oafish person.
(botany) A basal, membranous, outer sterile husk or bract in the flowers of grasses (Poaceae) and sedges (Cyperaceae).
A valley in a mountain area, especially one with a stream in the bottom
shiny, bright, glowing
(obsolete) An old woman.
A surname from German.
(intransitive, UK dialectal) A sideways glance.
Glamour; glamorousness.
A surname from Polish.
One who glues.
(obsolete, UK, intransitive) To glare or stare.
(Scotland, Ireland) To grasp or snatch (at), usually feebly or ineffectually; to grope (at) with the hands, as in the dark.
(4chan slang, derogatory) A video game addict.
(medicine, colloquial) Otitis media with effusion.
Transparent in colour.
A person whose occupation is to clean things, especially rooms, floors, and windows.
A person who is trying to become slim by dieting.
(chiefly UK, Commonwealth, Ireland, informal, often in the phrase drop a clanger) A very noticeable mistake; an attention-getting faux pas.
Someone who clones something.
A transliteration of the Russian male given name Кли́м (Klím).
An unincorporated community in Lawrence County, Missouri, United States.
A secluded and narrow valley, especially one with a river running through it; a depression between hills; a dale.
A male given name transferred from the surname, fairly popular in the middle of the 20th century.
(N)
a male first name of Nordic origin (Gunnarr in Old NorseBehind the Name: Gunnar).
A female given name originating as a coinage, in quiet use since the 19th century.