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Words that sound like "invent" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
To design a new process or mechanism.
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(n)
An occurrence; something that happens.
One who invents, either as a hobby or as an occupation.
A very young human being, from birth to somewhere between six months and two years of age after birth, needing almost constant care and attention.
(nonstandard) Alternative form of inventor. [One who invents, either as a hobby or as an occupation.]
Obsolete form of enchant. [To attract and delight, to charm.]
Something that is intended.
(transitive) To ask for the presence or participation of someone or something.
To spend money, time, or energy on something, especially for some benefit or purpose; used with in.
A cut or notch in the margin of anything, or a recess like a notch.
(transitive, US) To provide an incentive to (a person or organization).
(adv)
(idiomatic) Without success or a result; ending in failure.
(epidemiology) Initialism of number needed to treat.
A religious community whose members live under strict observation of religious rules and self-imposed vows.
(adj)
Lacking knowledge; ignorant.
(transitive) To wind around (something); to encircle or wrap up.
Having lasted from a remote period; having been of long duration; of great age, very old.
fictional, made up, imaginary.
(transitive) To enter by force, usually in order to conquer.
To attract and delight, to charm.
Possessed of a particular capacity for the design of new mechanisms or processes, creative or skilful at inventing.
(transitive) To turn (something) upside down or inside out; to place in a contrary order or direction.
(intransitive) To become involved in a situation, so as to alter or prevent an action. [with in]
(transitive) To adapt into a different form; to give a new style or image to.
A female given name from French borrowed from French in the nineteenth century.
(obsolete) The front of an army; the vanguard.
(transitive) To inject or put venom onto or into (someone or something).
(N)
Ivette or Ivete is a female given name.
A surname from Anglo-Norman.
To recite an incantation.
(archaic) To vaunt; to boast.
A female given name from the Germanic languages, a spelling variant of Yvette, confused with Eve.
Not yet sent or transmitted.
Abbreviation of interventional. [Incorporating, or characterized by, intervention]
A male given name from Sanskrit used in India.
An opening, possibly covered by a grate or grill, possibly ducted, that allows air to circulate.
a neighbourhood in the municipality and district of Beşiktaş, Istanbul Province, Turkey.
intersected with, or as if with, veins
(transitive) To bill; to issue an invoice to.
(obsolete) To inflame; to excite.
(transitive) To subject to invective; to censure or rail against.
(intransitive, with against or occasionally about, formerly also with on, at, upon) To complain loudly, to give voice to one's censure or criticism
Free from guilt, sin, or immorality.
Boundless, endless, without end or limits; innumerable.
(computing) Clipping of initialize. [To assign initial values to something.]
Misspelling of infinite. [Indefinably large, countlessly great; immense.]
Obsolete spelling of infinite. [Indefinably large, countlessly great; immense.]
(card games, obsolete) In mort, bridge, and similar games, the partner of dummy.
(anatomy) A small protuberance on the external surface of the back of the skull near the neck; the external occipital protuberance.
at or in the front
(transitive) To show or demonstrate clearly; to manifest.
Exhibiting inerrancy; without error.
Any cream containing medicinal ingredients applied to the skin for therapeutic purposes.
Abbreviation of infinite. [Something that is infinite in nature.]
A surname originating as a patronymic.
To implore or invoke.
(formal) Difficult to understand; complicated.
(obsolete) Unconquered; unsubdued.
A surname.
(archaic) Inward knowledge or understanding.
(payment or gift) consisting of goods or commodities (as opposed to money).
A town in Namur, Belgium.
have not (negative form of have)
A town in Hampshire, England.
(transitive) To make better; improve.
(archaic) A lover, especially if illicit; a paramour.