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Words that sound like "neighbor" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
A surname from Middle English.
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A surname.
A surname from Spanish.
(informal) One who grabs or snatches.
(UK, Ireland, Commonwealth, slang, derogatory) A stupid, obnoxious, or otherwise contemptible person.
(N)
(French title: Voisins) a 1952 anti-war film by Scottish-Canadian filmmaker Norman McLaren for the National Film Board of Canada.
(British, informal) A child.
A person who takes a nap.
(Islam) A prophet of Islam.
Neighborhood.
One who knaps.
An ancient city in Sumer, modern Nuffar in Afak Al-Qādisiyyah Governorate, Iraq.
A surname from German.
A surname from Malayalam.
(India, historical) A deputy.
(v)
US standard spelling of neighbour. [(transitive) To be adjacent to]
(used attributively) German chemist Fritz Haber, who co-invented the Haber process for producing ammonia from hydrogen and nitrogen.
A member of a mob.
(adj)
Physically close.
A rounded protuberance, especially one arising from a flat surface; a fleshy lump or caruncle.
(Internet) A new user or participant; someone who is extremely new and inexperienced (to a game or activity). A beginner.
(anatomy) The back part of the neck.
(informal, transitive) To grab or snatch something.
A river in Norfolk, England, tributary to the Great Ouse.
(Now chiefly dialectal, Scotland) (anatomy) Kidney.
(Internet slang, chiefly derogatory, dated) A newbie; someone who is new to a game, or has a new character.
A member of a group of Indian Hindu castes originating from Kerala.
A placename; any of several places:
(now dialectal) A person's nose.
Having many knobs or knob-like projections.
a person who knows or apprehends
(rare, anatomy) A nostril
John Napier, Scottish mathematician etc.
A male given name from Arabic.
a fictional planet in the Star Wars universe.
A kind of spirit according to Hmong beliefs.
(US) A single-serving package of snack crackers, usually filled with peanut butter.
The summit of a hill.
(obsolete, dialectal) A lad.
(colloquial) To nab or steal.
One who gnaws.
A city and town in Orange County, New York, United States, named after Newburgh, Fife.
(historical) A kind of Norse merchant ship used by the Vikings.
(rare or obsolete, intransitive) Alternative spelling of gnar. [To snarl or growl.]
Household linen, especially table linen.
The historical inhabitants of the Kathmandu Valley and its surrounding areas in Nepal, and creators of its historic heritage and civilization.
Alternative form of gnar. [To snarl or growl.]
Abbreviation of northeast by east. [The compass point halfway between northeast and east-northeast, specifically 56.25°, abbreviated as NEbE.]
Mesua ferrea (Ceylon ironwood).
A city, the county seat of Craven County, North Carolina; named for Bern, Switzerland.
A village in the City of Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne and Wear, England, west of the city and on the north bank of the Tyne (OS grid ref NZ1665).