Show me
of
Words that sound like "lyric" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
(usually in the plural) The words of a song or other vocal music.
Relevance: 0%
A surname.
A surname from German.
(adj)
Pertaining to, or derived from, the European bay or laurel (Laurus nobilis)
The words to a song (or other vocal music).
A humorous, often bawdy verse of five anapaestic lines, with the rhyme scheme aabba, and typically having an 8–8–5–5–8 cadence.
A member of a clergy.
The basic unit of currency in Turkey.
(UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) Flesh, brawn, or muscle; the fleshy part of a person or animal in contradistinction to the bone and skin.
Any of various small, singing passerine birds of the family Alaudidae.
A male given name transferred from the surname.
Cautious, suspicious, wary, hesitant, or nervous about something; having reservations or concerns.
A male or female given name transferred from the surname, of modern usage.
(of a glance) sidelong and slyly lascivious
Relating to stone.
of, relating to, or causing lysis
Lay, relating to laypersons, as opposed to clerical.
(N)
a small town in the Ostalbkreis district, in Baden-Württemberg, Germany, by the river Rems, 8 kilometers west of Schwäbisch Gmünd.
a commune in the Tarn department in southern France.
(historical) A cuirass, originally of leather, afterward of plates of metal or horn sewed on linen or the like.
Acronym of Long-acting reversible contraception.
(inorganic chemistry) Containing cerium with valence four.
A surname from French.
A river in central Italy that rises in the Monti Simbruini and joins the Gari to form the Garigliano.
larches
(chemistry) Pertaining to, obtained from or containing fluorine.
(obsolete) Having a smooth surface; slippery.
(after a qualification) University of Leicester, used especially following post-nominal letters indicating status as a graduate.
A female given name from Hebrew.
A village near Fagernes in Nord-Aurdal municipality, Innlandet, Norway.
A male given name.
A haystack.
A female given name from Latin.
A diminutive of the male given name Laurence or Lawrence, popular as a male given name in the U.S. in the 1940s and the 1950s.
A female given name from Russian or Ukrainian.
A female given name from Latin, an alternative spelling of Laura.
A bowed string musical instrument used in the Byzantine Empire.
(UK) Touchy, aggressive or confrontational, usually while drunk.
an obscure Celtic god, invoked alongside the goddess Lerina as the eponymous spirit of Lérins in Provence.
a San Francisco-based maker of e-discovery products.
Of or pertaining to the Baltic family of languages.
A surname from Old English.
A form of yarn (or fabric made from it) that incorporates a glittering metallic thread.
(physics) A linear particle accelerator.
(nautical, by extension) The members of a ship's company who are not officers.
(v)
(British) To rest; to dwell.
(intransitive) To look sideways or obliquely; now especially with sexual desire or malicious intent.
(now Scotland) Something learned; a lesson.
(Irish mythology) A personification of the sea in Irish mythology.
(nonce word) A greatcoat.
Pertaining to, derived from, or containing iron.
A historic king of the Visigoths.
A suburban village in Aberdeenshire council area, Scotland, west of Aberdeen (OS grid ref NJ8206).
Of, from or relating to the Balearic Islands, Spain.
Archaic form of eldritch. [Unearthly, supernatural, eerie, preternatural.]
A surname from Irish.