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Words that sound like "illustrate" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
(figurative) To clarify something by giving, or serving as, an example or a comparison.
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(n)
a person who draws pictures (especially illustrations in books or magazines)
(colloquial) To fluster or frustrate.
(adj)
Unable to read and write.
Containing illustrations.
(obsolete, rare) Without lustre.
The collective people of a country, state, or electoral district who are entitled to vote.
(intransitive) To exhibit alliteration.
Disinclined to read though not illiterate; able to read but reluctant or unlikely to do so.
Admired, distinguished, respected, or well-known.
Demonstrative, exemplative, showing an example or demonstrating.
absent-minded, troubled, distracted
(medicine, transitive) To cause an ulcer to develop.
(organic chemistry) Any salt or ester of glyceric acid
(transitive) To renew or renovate.
A device that allows its operator to draw a freehand sketch over a motion picture image.
Alternative form of ill-treat. [To treat someone or something badly or unkindly; to abuse or mistreat.]
(N)
a breakfast cereal produced by Kellogg's.
Confused, befuddled, in a state of panic by having become overwrought with confusion.
(transitive) To disappoint or defeat; to vex by depriving of something expected or desired.
(transitive) To remove the testicles of a person or animal.
Grouped into a cluster.
The Allstate Corporation is an American insurance company, headquartered in Glenview, Illinois (with a Northbrook, Illinois address) since 2022.
Synonym of Wall Street.
An avenging spirit or deity, variously associated with the Erinyes, Nemesis, and more.
(UK) a rate (typically of money) that does not vary over time
Representing a state, often in a competition or sport.
Growing in, or full of, clusters; like clusters.
(idiomatic) To discontinue engaging in criminal acts; to become a law-abiding person.
Having a process resembling the beak of a bird; beaked; rostellate.
A castrated man; a eunuch.
(transitive) To destroy (someone or something) completely, leaving no trace; to annihilate, to wipe out.
Unlawful.
To evoke, educe (emotions, feelings, responses, etc.); to generate, obtain, or provoke as a response or answer.
The terminal through which electric current passes between metallic and nonmetallic parts of an electric circuit.
An illiterate person, one either not able to read and write or not knowing how.
(Minecraft) Rare, wing-like items that allow players to glide and fly.
Someone who alliterates.
The collective property and liabilities of someone, especially a deceased person.
Deeply hurt, saddened, or worried; incapacitated by distress.
Something which illustrates; a comparison or example intended to make clear or apprehensible, or to remove obscurity.
(transitive) To treat someone, or something roughly or badly.
Alternative form of real estate. [Property that cannot easily be moved, usually buildings and the ground on which they are built.]
(figurative) To make (something) clear and understandable; to clarify, to illuminate, to shed light on.
Resulting from an illusion; deceptive, imaginary, unreal.
(computing) To perform or repeat an action on each item in a set.
To push or thrust out.
A male given name.
A male given name from Scottish Gaelic.
Property that cannot easily be moved, usually buildings and the ground on which they are built.
The liquid or solution that has passed through a filter, and which has been separated from other fractions of the original material.
(transitive) To install (someone) in office; to establish.
(adv)
without losing equilibrium
Referring or relating to real estate.
that is to say; in other words
That tends to elude
(intransitive, archaic) To gleam, glisten, or coruscate.
A dais or raised platform.
Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see in, state.
Abbreviation of illustration. [The act of illustrating; the act of making clear and distinct.]
(rare, medicine) To dilate.