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Words that sound like "musty" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Having an odour or taste of mould; also (generally), having a stale or unfresh odour or taste.
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(n)
(archaic) A person of one-eighth African ancestry.
Covered in mist; foggy.
A dormant conical volcano in the Andes mountains in southern Peru.
(v)
(transitive) To tie incorrectly.
Full of, or producing, mast (the kind of fruit)
moist
A surname.
(rare) Resembling or characteristic of a nest.
(music) sad, mournful
(military) An assembling or review of troops, as for parade, verification of numbers, inspection, exercise, or introduction into service.
Having been mussed: messy, rumpled.
Alternative spelling of mousy. [Resembling a mouse.]
(archaic) A native house servant in India.
(N)
a small but densely populated city in the Northern Region of Malta.
Rumpled, tousled or untidy.
(religion) One of the titles of God. Supreme, most magnificent.
Something that is mandatory, required or recommended.
Anything unmissably good, such as a film or television programme or a tourist attraction.
A surname
Contemptible, unpleasant (of a person).
Something secret or unexplainable; an unknown.
not caught with the senses or the mind
(countable, uncountable) Water or other liquid finely suspended in air. (Compare fog, haze.)
(of a place, situation, person, etc) In a disorderly state; chaotic; disorderly.
A man.
(often literary) A place in the middle of something; may be used of a literal or metaphorical location.
(especially British) Abbreviation of Mister. [A general title of respect for an adult male.]
A diminutive of the female given name Melissa.
(transitive, often used with "up") To make untidy or dirty.
An aura of heightened interest, meaning or mystery surrounding a person or thing.
Archaic form of mystery (“a trade”). [Something secret or unexplainable; an unknown.]
an adventure video game designed by Rand and Robyn Miller.
(Canada, US, Philippines, formerly or traditionally UK) Abbreviation of Mister. [A general title of respect for an adult male.]
(UK, archaic) The storm petrel.
(Scientology, often attributive) The physical universe, the universe of sensory perception.
Alternative spelling of mitey (“infested with mites”). [Of or pertaining to mites.]
(transitive, rare, medicine) To take an MRI scan of.
(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.
Initialism of Ministry of International Trade and Industry (of Japan).
A surname from French.
(Japanese politics) Abbreviation of Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry.
(Geordie, slang) The Tyne and Wear Metro.
(transitive) To do (something) incorrectly or improperly.
A borough of Venice, Veneto, Italy, located on the mainland.
The quality of being misty.
To teach incorrectly.
Someone who has control over something or someone.
A female given name transferred from the surname.
The act or process of mastering; the state of having mastered; expertise.
(UK) Sociable or friendly.
A female given name transferred from the surname, of modern usage.
brought together into a group or crowd
Heavy; massive.
(UK and Scotland, archaic) A fat herring with undeveloped roe.
A surname from Italian.
In Greek culture, a protective symbol resembling an eye, supposed to ward off the evil eye.
Alternative spelling of Maasai. [A member of an indigenous people in Kenya and Tanzania.]
(dialectal) To master; to gain control over.