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Words that sound like "joyful" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Feeling or causing joy.
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(adv)
In a joyful manner; joyously.
(n)
A surname.
(v)
(ambitransitive) To put in a random order.
(obsolete, UK, dialect) To hobble or limp; to shuffle.
A quantity contained in or on a shoe.
a girl or young woman who is unmarried
A valuable object used for personal ornamentation, especially one made of precious metals and stones; a piece of jewellery.
(biblical) A book of the Old Testament and the Hebrew Tanakh.
A port in western Israel.
A brand of electronic cigarette produced by Juul Labs.
Obsolete form of gayal. [Bos frontalis, a Southern Asiatic species of domestic cattle.]
(obsolete) A vagabond.
(New Zealand, slang, chiefly derogatory) Initialism of just another fucking Aucklander.
As much as a jar will hold
(N)
a Swedish brand of ice hockey equipment owned by Birch Hill Equity Partners through its portfolio company
To grab or seize
(UK, dialectal) The European green woodpecker, Picus viridis.
A surname from German.
(obsolete) Full of trifling play.
Having the opportunity to choose or make choices; abounding in choices
A surname originating as a patronymic.
A female given name from French Joëlle [in turn from Hebrew], masculine equivalent Joel.
Any of several fish species, principally groupers and similar-appearing fish
(colloquial) A very short, unspecified length of time.
(intransitive) To shake, rattle, or wiggle.
Any of certain wild canids of the genera Lupulella and Canis, native to the tropical Old World and smaller than a wolf.
A male given name, transferred from the surname.
(ambitransitive) To bump into or brush against while in motion; to push aside.
A city in New Mexico.
(South Africa, slang) A party.
(transitive) To shake slightly; to push suddenly but slightly, so as to cause to shake or totter; to jostle; to jog.
A surname from Hebrew.
(uncommon) A male given name.
(anatomy) Pertaining to the jugal bone.
Alternative form of jostle. [(ambitransitive) To bump into or brush against while in motion; to push aside.]
a surname originating in Denmark.
Not joyful; unhappy; joyless; sad.
A wattle-and-mud hut common in Mexico and the southwestern US.
As much as a jug will hold.
A mountain covered with ice and snow, a snow mountain.
Very bad.
Noticeably happy and optimistic.
(transitive) To confuse or perplex (someone) completely; to bewilder, to confound, to puzzle.
Alternative spelling of duffel. [A kind of coarse woolen cloth, having a thick nap or frieze.]
A surname from French.
(US, colloquial) Outfit or supplies, collectively; kit.
A full or complete view; a good look.
Eifel (a mountain range in western Germany).
(obsolete, in compounds) A support or frame.
holding about half of the full capacity
(intransitive) To feel joy, to rejoice.
Initialism of English as a foreign language.
(intransitive) To puzzle; to baffle.
A line of people or animals fastened together, especially a chain of prisoners or slaves.
Alternative spelling of chock full. [(informal) Containing the maximum amount possible, flush on all sides, jam-packed, crammed.]
Alternative form of chock full. [(informal) Containing the maximum amount possible, flush on all sides, jam-packed, crammed.]
(obsolete) annoying
The (English: Buffalo) an infantry mobility vehicle used by the South African Defence Force during the South African Border War.
to flap, like a flag