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Words that sound like "humble" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Having a low opinion of oneself; not proud, arrogant, or assuming; modest.
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(n)
A river in Hampshire, England.
A surname.
(astronomy, space flight) The Hubble Space Telescope.
Overcome with humility; in awe of the strength of another or one's own weakness
One who humbles.
Hummel figurine
(archaic) Entrails of a deer.
(music) Suitable for humming or humming along to.
(v)
(intransitive) To fall end over end; to roll over and over.
A low, heavy, continuous sound, such as that of thunder or a hungry stomach.
(transitive, intransitive) To speak unintelligibly or inaudibly; to fail to articulate.
(intransitive) To act or move in an awkward or confused manner (often clumsily, incompetently, or carelessly).
(transitive) To mix or confuse.
Any of various hand tools for boring holes.
(Midlands) A shady valley, a dingle; especially one with steep wooded sides and a stream running through it.
Obsolete form of jumble (“kind of sugared cake”). [A mixture of often unrelated things.]
The plant muskroot.
(ambitransitive) To peck at or nibble.
Alternative form of sumbal. [The plant muskroot.]
A surname from German.
(colloquial) Clipping of Hemel Hempstead. [A town in Hertfordshire, England.]
(UK, dialect, Northumbria) A shed or hovel for cattle.
german dramatist (1813-1863)
(dialect) A rumble of the stomach.
(music) A kettledrum.
A drum-shaped mould used to cook food.
A character or glyph representing an idea, concept or object.
Quick and light in movement or action.
(sewing) A pitted, now usually metal, cup-shaped cap worn on the tip of a finger, which is used in sewing to push the needle through material.
To walk lame, or unevenly.
(countable, slang) A fraud or sham; (uncountable) hypocrisy.
A weight training implement consisting of a short bar with weight counterpoised on each end.
A placename
A surname from Irish.
(law, third-person singular only) It seems; it appears that
(rare) Of or pertaining to winter, wintry.
A porter in Turkey and nearby countries.
(chiefly British, colloquial, intransitive) To walk or travel with no particular haste.
(obsolete) A bower; a dingle.
(chiefly East Midlands) To move in order to make tidy; to tidy or put away.
American standard spelling of haemal.
Generally able or adroit; handy.
(obsolete) A kind of confectionery or cake.
(N)
(HTML Abstraction Markup Language) a templating system that is designed to avoid writing inline code in a web document and make the HTML cleaner.
Alternative form of hamal (porter) [A porter in Turkey and nearby countries.]
A yellowish-brown deer of the genus Hippocamelus, of South America; the two species are endangered.
(transitive, intransitive) To handle nervously or awkwardly.
A rambling; an instance of someone talking at length without direction.
A characteristical surname from Scottish Gaelic.
(vulgar, slang) Sexual intercourse.
To walk while shuffling or dragging the feet.
(transitive) To make wrinkled, particularly fabric.
an electoral ward in the London Borough of Barking and Dagenham from 1965 to 2002.
A hot relish made from chili peppers and other ingredients.
(transitive) To make dumpy; to fold, or bend, as one part over another.
(heraldry) A band along the top part of the shield, half the height of the chief.
(sometimes derogatory, slang) A physically attractive man who lacks intelligence; the male equivalent of a bimbo.