Show me
of
Words that sound like "marvelous" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
(American spelling) Exciting wonder or surprise; astonishing; wonderful.
Relevance: 0%
(British spelling) Exciting wonder or surprise; astonishing; wonderful.
(N)
a four-issue miniseries comic book written by Kurt Busiek, painted by Alex Ross and edited by Marcus McLaurin.
(n)
A male given name from Latin.
Alternative form of marvelling. [The act of one who marvels; amazement.]
A surname.
A surname from Hebrew.
Mary Alice Smith (December 3, 1936 – July 27, 2022), known professionally as Mary Alice, was an American television, film, and stage actress.
(v)
(intransitive) To become filled with wonderment or admiration; to be amazed at something.
(adv)
Alternative form of marvellously. [In a marvellous manner.]
To a great or impressive degree; very.
(historical) A fashionable young Frenchwoman of the late 18th-century, characterized by extravagant dress sense and anti-revolutionary ideas.
Without marrow.
A surname from Spanish.
The act of one who marvels; amazement.
A state of Mexico.
A female given name.
(intransitive) To make moral reflections (on, upon, about or over something); to regard acts and events as involving a moral.
Obsolete spelling of marvel. [That which causes wonder; a prodigy; a portent.]
A female given name from Hebrew, variant of Maria.
a surname that, like its variants shown below, is derived from the Ashkenazi Hebrew pronunciation of the Hebrew word , meaning 'pearl'.
A male given name.
One who marvels.
Showing no mercy; cruel and pitiless.
Motionless.
Without merit.
(Hinduism, Buddhism) Any ritualistic geometric design, symbolic of the Universe, used as an aid to meditation.
Approximately.
A teacher of morals; a person who studies morality; a moral philosopher.
An ancient walled city in the province of Castellón, Valencia, Spain
An author of novels.
A female given name from Spanish.
Devoid of nerves: calm, controlled, cool under pressure.
To adapt something to a fictional form, especially to adapt into a novel.
a 1921 American silent drama film directed by William Desmond Taylor and starring May McAvoy, William P. Carleton, and Marian Skinner.
In terms of morals or ethics.
(Greek mythology) The god and personification of dreams; according to the Roman poet Ovid, one of the sons of Somnus, the god of sleep.
A female given name from Latin.
A barangay of Calatrava, Negros Occidental, Philippines.
A true morel; any of several fungi in the genus Morchella, the upper part of which is covered with a reticulated and pitted hymenium.
(transitive) To make mortal.
(botany) Any of the plant genus Mirabilis; a four-o'clock.
(embryology) A spherical mass of blastomeres that forms following the splitting of a zygote; it becomes the blastula
"Marsella" is also the Spanish name of Marseille.
A hairstyle characterized by deep waves made by a curling iron.
Any of many fingerlike extensions on the surfaces of many cells, consisting of the proteins actin, fimbrin, and villin.
A female given name originating as a coinage.
A female given name from Hebrew.
A fortified wine from Sicily.
A plant of the genus Malus (the apples).
A title of nobility for a man ranking beneath a duke and above an earl.
The French national anthem, La Marseillaise, with at least seven verses plus the chorus.
an Australian television series, which aired on the Seven Network in 2002, starring Lisa McCune and Alison Whyte as lawyers and sisters.
A female given name from French.
united states political philosopher (born in germany) concerned about the dehumanizing effects of capitalism and modern technology (1898-1979)
The quality or state of being marvelous.
A surname from French.
(historical) The month of March in the ancient Roman calendar.
(transitive) To make (something) look like marble; to marble.
In a martial manner.
A (Finnish) mark, the currency used in Finland before the introduction of the euro, consisting of 100 penni. Abbreviation FIM.
(obsolete) Without mixture or adulteration; strong; racy.