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Words that sound like "misery" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
Great unhappiness; extreme pain of body or mind; wretchedness; distress; woe.
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A state in the Midwestern region of the United States. Capital: Jefferson City. Largest city: Kansas City.
A city in Sarawak, Malaysia.
(adj)
Resembling or characteristic of a mire; swampy, boggy.
(dialectal or obsolete) A bog or quagmire.
Egyptian Arabic.
A surname. Alternative form of Mishra.
(N)
a surname of Maltese origin.
(Italian politics, historical) The Italian Social Movement.
Obsolete spelling of merry. [Jolly and full of high spirits; happy.]
Initialism of manufacturer's suggested retail price.
(v)
(intransitive) To enter into the conjugal or connubial state; to take a husband or a wife.
Jolly and full of high spirits; happy.
A Scottish surname from Scottish Gaelic.
Bewildered; dazed.
Corymbia calophylla, an Australian tree.
A language of Cameroon.
A female given name, variant of Merry.
A mausoleum or shrine in the Arab world.
A dark blue color.
A kind of small black cherry.
Consisting of, containing, or resembling mother (in vinegar).
A diminutive of the female given name Melissa.
(derogatory) A person who hoards money rather than spending it; one who is cheap or extremely parsimonious.
Archaic form of mystery (“a trade”). [Something secret or unexplainable; an unknown.]
A Volga-Finnic people in the Volga region.
To read wrongly; misconstrue; misinterpret; mistake the sense or significance of.
(by extension) A female given name from India.
A surname.
A diminutive of the female given name Margaret, from Scottish.
A surname from Japanese.
A portia tree (Thespesia populnea), of dark, durable, attractive wood.
A member of the indigenous people of New Zealand.
Like a miser, very or objectionably cautious with money.
Irtiza Rubab (born 12 May 1977), better known by her stage name Meera, is a Pakistani film actress and television presenter.
Alternative spelling of Maisie. [A diminutive of the female given name Margaret, from Scottish.]
Mazelike; like a maze.
(Judaism) An informer or grass; one who tells on another.
Maizie is a 1933 American drama film directed by Dallas M. Fitzgerald and starring Dorothy Lee, Lee Moran and John Darrow.
(chiefly informal) University of Missouri
A person who is interested in becoming a Buddhist and elects to join a Buddhist community to learn more.
A surname from Irish.
(New Zealand) Life force, according to Maori beliefs.
(archaic or historical) A large drinking bowl made from such wood; a mazer bowl.
A surname from Italian.
(informal) A young woman; miss.
(UK, colloquial) Alternative spelling or pronunciation spelling of missus. [(colloquial) Wife or girlfriend.]
(mineralogy) An impure yellow sulphate of iron; yellow copperas or copiapite.
A surname from Polish.
The goods in which a mercer deals.
A surname from Sanskrit.
A surname from French.
A particular divinity (yazata) in Zoroastrianism and later Iranian history and culture, the hypostasis of "contract", "oath".
(chiefly historical) An Arab frontier outpost or garrison town, chiefly in the period of early Islamic expansion.
A sweet cherry, Prunus avium, especially when used as rootstock.
a goddess in the Polynesian mythology of the Cook Islands who lives in Avaiki beneath Mangaia.
(Buddhism) Benevolence, lovingkindness or compassion, especially if developed through meditation or mindfulness.
Resembling a moor; swampy; boggy.
pussy, purulent (containing or secreting pus)
Alternative form of Mehri. [A Semitic ethnic group primarily inhabiting South Arabia and the Guardafui Channel island of Socotra.]
(British, chiefly dialectal) Raining in the form of mizzle (“misty rain; drizzle”); drizzly.
Synonym of hawthorn.