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Words that sound like "hold" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
(transitive) To grasp or grip.
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(adj)
Having one or more holes.
(n)
Archaic spelling of hold. [A grasp or grip.]
(N)
"Held" is a song by Smog, released as his first single from his 1999 album Knock Knock.
freed from illness or injury
To utter a loud, protracted, mournful sound or cry, as dogs and wolves often do.
A small piece of woodland or a woody hill; a copse.
(impersonal) To have hailstones fall from the sky.
(transitive) To transport by drawing or pulling, as with horses or oxen, or a motor vehicle.
Having a heel (often of a specified type, as in high-heeled etc.).
(weaving) Heddle.
A surname.
(transitive) To drag or pull, especially forcibly.
Deprived of the hulls.
Having hills.
To make hellish; to place (someone) in hell; to make (a place) into a hell.
(obsolete) A wood; copse.
In Scandinavian mythology, Huld is only referenced by völva or seiðkona, that is a woman who practiced the seiðr.
(archaic, regional) An unforested or deforested plain, a grassland, a moor.
A hollow place or cavity; an excavation; a pit; a dent; a depression; a fissure.
Entire, undivided.
Dedicated to a religious purpose or a god.
(intransitive) To stop either temporarily or permanently.
A thing that holds.
a freemium web and mobile application which provides a form of VPN service to its users through a peer-to-peer network.
(obsolete) Lofty; haughty.
The handle of a sword, consisting of grip, guard, and pommel, designed to facilitate use of the blade and afford protection to the hand.
(adv)
Completely and entirely; to the fullest extent; (loosely, exaggeratedly) very; to a great extent.
Having, or being full of, holes.
(informal) A hold, grip, grasp.
A Hindu festival, held in the spring, during which people throw coloured powders at each other during noisy street celebrations.
(ambitransitive) To cut, dig, scrape, turn, arrange, or clean, with this tool.
(transitive, obsolete) To ordain; consecrate; admit to a religious order.
Obsolete spelling of whole [Entire, undivided.]
A surname from German.
(aviation) Acronym of take-off and landing data
(transitive) To impose a fee for the use of.
(of a thing) Having a low temperature.
Courageous, daring.
(obsolete) salary; military pay
A hollow form or matrix for shaping a fluid or plastic substance.
uttered with a trill
Commonwealth spelling of mold (“growth of tiny fungi”).
(cricket) (Dismissed) by the bowled ball hitting and breaking the batsman's wicket.
Without horns; said of livestock that normally have horns, but which have been bred to be hornless, or which have been dehorned.
(in combination) Having a specified kind of sole.
a village in Giske Municipality in Møre og Romsdal county, Norway.
(of walking routes) Marked with poles.
To distribute in small amounts; to share out small portions of a meager resource.
Obsolete spelling of mold. [A hollow form or matrix for shaping a fluid or plastic substance.]
Having bolls
Having a knoll (hill) or knolls.
To become shallow.
(transitive, now Northern England, Northern Ireland, Scotland) To endure, to put up with, to tolerate.
Untamed; not domesticated.
(informal, euphemistic) damned (as an intensifier or vehement denial)
To handle with skill and ease, especially a weapon or tool.
A town in Franklin County, Maine, United States, named after Benjamin Weld.
Having a document specifying inheritance.
(intransitive) To cry out, as in sorrow or anguish.
Forest; woods.
Pertaining to a wall; surrounded by a wall
A surname from Middle English.
Having wheels; on wheels.
(archaic) An open country.
(transitive) To surpass in skill or achievement.
(transitive) To entice or lure.
(text messaging) Abbreviation of would. [Past tense of will; usually followed by a bare infinitive.]
(transitive) To occupy or entertain (someone) in order to let time pass.
A raised rib in knitted goods or fabric, especially corduroy.
(intransitive) To hunt for whales.
To mark with stripes; to wale.