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Words that sound like "pleasure" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
(uncountable) A state of being pleased or contented; gratification.
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someone who gives a pledge
A surname.
Faux leather, usually of polyurethane.
(adj)
Having a soft, fluffy exterior (of a man-made object, especially stuffed animals or upholstery).
(v)
(transitive) To give or afford pleasure to.
Someone or something who pleasures.
(medicine) a small hammer with a rubber head used in percussive examinations of the chest and in testing reflexes
(obsolete, rare) injury
One who plucks.
Any of various wading birds of the subfamily Charadriinae.
One who, or that which, plugs.
Someone or something which pleases.
One who plays any game or sport.
To make a solemn promise (to do something).
A tray for serving foods.
A notebook or software in which one keeps reminders of items such as appointments, tasks, projects, and contacts.
One who plies.
(computing) An output device that draws graphs and other pictorial images on paper, sometimes using attached pens.
Someone who plates metal.
One who places or arranges something.
(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.
(countable, uncountable) Face makeup that makes the cheeks rosier.
A kind of balance used in raising and letting down a drawbridge. It consists of timbers joined in the form of a Saint Andrew's cross.
Flat, two-dimensional.
One who plows; one who works land with a plow.
someone who receives a pledge
Alternative spelling of plower. [One who plows; one who works land with a plow.]
Someone or something that plagues or annoys.
One who or that which plights, engages, or pledges.
A person or machine that produces pleats.
(especially Northern England, Scotland, Northern Ireland) Alternative spelling of blather. [(derogatory) Foolish or nonsensical talk.]
(countable) A surname.
(US, usually in the plural) A stand of tiered planks used as seating for spectators, often outdoors.
(intransitive) To make a loud sound, especially like a trumpet.
A female given name from Scottish Gaelic, variant of Blair.
One who blesses; one who bestows or invokes a blessing.
(baseball, softball, pesäpallo) The player who delivers the ball to the batter.
One who furnishes, fits, and repairs pipes and other apparatus for the conveyance of water, gas, or drainage.
A device that is used to remove blockages from the drain of a basin or tub, by suction.
A surname originating as an occupation.
Like plush; soft and shaggy.
A person who makes something smooth or shiny.
A person who pillages.
(informal) A young child, usually male.
A fish-trap in the form of a conical basket, traditionally used in parts of Great Britain, where they are set out in rows against the tide.
(usually followed by of) An excessive amount or number; an abundance.
(intransitive, derogatory) To talk rapidly without making much sense.
Two similar or identical things taken together; often followed by of.
An edible fruit produced by the pear tree, similar to an apple but typically elongated towards the stem.
Free time, time free from work or duties.
(telecommunications) A wireless telecommunications device that receives text or voice messages.
(transitive) To remove the outer covering or skin of something with a cutting device, typically a knife.
The capital city of South Dakota, United States, and the county seat of Hughes County.
(astronomy) A bright region in the chromosphere of the Sun.
A surname from Dutch or German.
One who pens; a writer.
(of eyes or vision) Dim; unclear from water or rheum.
(intransitive) To splash.
An act of giving (sometimes sexual) pleasure.
Alternative form of Pyotr. [A transliteration of the Russian male given name Пётр (Pjotr).]
(dated) One who peaches or informs on another; an informer.
(law) a person who pleads in court; an advocate
(computing) A process or program that applies a software patch.
(transitive) To unite by interweaving, as (horticulture) branches of shrubs, trees, etc., to create a hedge; to interlock, to plash.
A tool used to pare things.
Obsolete form of petard. [(historical) A small, hat-shaped explosive device, used to breach a door or wall.]
Obsolete form of pair. [Two similar or identical things taken together; often followed by of.]
A person who pegs (in any sense).
A surname transferred from the given name.
The crime of literary theft; plagiarism.
A sturdy laced leather half-boot.
Someone or something that pairs or combines
(computing) A software or hardware mechanism that blits.
Watery, wet, waterlogged.
(ceramics) The apparatus used for blunging (mixing clay with water to make pottery).
A floor made of wood.