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Words that sound like "mother" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
A female parent, especially of a human; a female who parents a child (which she has given birth to, adopted, or fostered).
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(Scotland and Northern England) mother
A surname originating as an occupation for someone who mowed hay.
A person who mouths
A surname from Hindi.
(v)
(Yorkshire, dialect) to bother or harass
(archaic, UK, dialect) A mother.
(adj)
(chiefly US, informal) Different, other.
(Internet) A participant in a multi-user dungeon.
A person who dons a disguising costume, as for a parade or a festival.
(rare) To mumble or stammer from doubt or hesitation.
A prescribed quantity or extent.
(N)
(formerly the Carlton Ballroom) a club in the Erdington district of Birmingham, England, during the late 1960s and early 1970s.
(transitive) To suffocate; stifle; obstruct, more or less completely, the respiration of something or someone.
Lower; under.
One who, or that which, mulls.
Receiving the care and attention of a mother.
One who drives a dogsled over ice and snow; specifically, one who participates in a dogsled race.
One who mungs.
Alternative form of nether. [Lower; under.]
A surname.
A mausoleum or shrine in the Arab world.
Obsolete form of murder. [(uncountable) The crime of killing a person unlawfully, especially with predetermination.]
A small settlement in Newchurch and Merthyr community, Carmarthenshire, Wales (OS grid ref SN3520).
Consisting of, containing, or resembling mother (in vinegar).
(obsolete, Scotland) A die, cut in intaglio, for stamping an ornament in relief, as upon metal.
"A Mother" is a short story by James Joyce published in his 1914 collection Dubliners.
(adv)
Similarly not.
One who moshes.
of a wind: to blow with a dull roaring, such as among trees
german mathematician (1882-1935)
An adult female horse.
(informal) Methamphetamine, especially in the form of the crystalline hydrochloride.
(countable) An English and Scottish surname originating as an occupation for a miller.
(fantasy) merpeople
Just, only; no more than, pure and simple, neither more nor better than might be expected.
(now historical) A traditional village community in Imperial Russia, characterised by self-government and collectivist control of local lands.
(UK, Ireland, Commonwealth, slang, offensive) An unattractive or ugly person.
(Geordie, Scotland) more
A surname originating as an occupation, a variant of Miller.
A female given name from Irish.
A surname from Hebrew.
A habitational surname.
A smith (worker with iron or other metals; one who smiths)
Symbol for megayear(s).
The seventh solar month of the Persian calendar.
A hamlet in Bude-Stratton parish, north Cornwall, England (OS grid ref SS2007).
(entertainment industry) A melodrama.
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.
Obsolete spelling of meres.
Obsolete form of mere. [Boundary, limit; a boundary-marker; boundary-line.]
(business) Initialism of monthly recurring revenue.
(India, cooking) fenugreek
(UK, regional) Feeling very cold; freezing.
A dye made from the plant.
a townland in the Parish of Tomregan, Barony of Tullyhaw, County Cavan, Ireland.
(obsolete) To moderate.
Someone who mimes during a performance of a song
(UK dialectal) A mower.
A member of an Indian community found largely within Maharashtra and historically identified as untouchables.
a person who mutilates or destroys or disfigures or cripples
The currency of the Kingdom of Nepal and adjoining parts of Videha from the late 17th century until 1932, subdivided into dams.
(transitive) to pester