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Words that sound like "plain" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
An airplane; an aeroplane.
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(adj)
Simple, unaltered.
A set of intended actions, usually mutually related, through which one expects to achieve a goal.
(chiefly of abjad script) Written with matres lectionis (letters indicating vowels).
A city in Anoka County, Minnesota, United States.
A skin swelling or sore; a blister; a blotch.
A surname.
A male given name
(v)
(intransitive) To act in a manner such that one has fun; to engage in activities expressly for the purpose of recreation or entertainment.
The fruit and its tree.
An individual sheet of glass in a window, door, etc.
(US, with "the") The Great Plains region of North America.
The vane (“flattened, web-like part”) of a feather, especially when on a quill pen or the fletching of an arrow.
A neighbourhood of Macon, formerly a city, in Bibb County, Georgia, United States.
A little mass of lead, or the like, attached to a line, and used by builders, etc., to indicate a vertical direction.
Of a surface: flat or level.
An English surname, of Norman derivation, meaning someone who lived outside of a city (see Latin pagus).
Of lenses: flat; having no curvature; not serving to correct the vision.
(woodworking) A tool which smooths a surface or makes one surface of a workpiece parallel to the tool's bed.
A policeman who wears plainclothes.
A complaint.
Flat, two-dimensional.
An expanse of land with relatively low relief and few trees, especially a grassy expanse.
(soccer, transitive) To pass (someone) the ball into an attacking position.
Abbreviation of pipeline end manifold.
(also 'play upon') To exploit (a double meaning, similarity in sound, etc.) for humorous or creative effect.
(chiefly South Wales) To swell or inflate; to fill up.
A length of wax-print fabric made in West Africa, worn as a single wrap or made into other clothing, and serving as a form of currency.
A surname from French.
Distended, swollen, or inflated.
A female given name from Ancient Greek.
A blintz or blini.
(equine, obsolete) An inflammation in the foot of a horse, between the sole and the bone.
A tool, originally made from a feather but now usually a small tubular instrument, containing ink used to write or make marks.
(countable, uncountable) Any coniferous tree of the genus Pinus.
(transitive) To give as security on a loan of money; especially, to deposit (something) at a pawn shop.
A surname from Welsh.
A lowly person; a peasant or serf; a labourer who is obliged to do menial work.
(informal) University of Pennsylvania
(medicine, archaic) Yaws.
A female given name from Latin.
(particle physics) Any of three semistable mesons, having positive, negative or neutral charge, composed of up and down quarks/antiquarks.
(slang) Penis.
A type of short, diagonally cut pasta.
(by extension) Any loud and joyous song; a song of triumph.
(heraldry) A heraldic fur of gold spots on a black field.
Alternative spelling of peen. [The (often spherical) end of the head of a hammer opposite the main hammering end.]
(Latin America) A conical loaf of sugar.
Alternative form of peen. [The (often spherical) end of the head of a hammer opposite the main hammering end.]
The action of the verb pin in any sense.
(ambitransitive, rare) To make or become pale.
(US, nautical) A tarpaulin.
(law) Pain or punishment.
A female peafowl.
Any of a class of fibrous proteins found in pilus structures in bacteria
(poetry) A foot containing any pattern of three short syllables and one long syllable.
A lustrous finish applied to velvet and satin.
(N)
PaN is the melodic mode used by the Tamil people in their music since the ancient times.
(Polari and other slang) A young woman; a girl.
(informal) To enter or move into a location or a vehicle in large numbers.
A surname from German.
A municipality and small village in the south of Nordwestmecklenburg district, Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Germany.
(Philippines, US) operational plan
A female given name originating as a coinage.
French for godfather.
(ambitransitive, figurative) To criticize someone or something in a concerted effort; to add on some additional critique.