Show me
of
Words that sound like "poem" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
A literary piece written in verse.
Relevance: 0%
(South Sudan) a subdivision of a county in parts of South Sudan and Sudan
(v)
(transitive, Internet) To send a private message to (someone).
(adv)
(used after the hour) In the 12-hour period from noon to midnight (the latter half of the day) when using the 12-hour clock.
(slang) The police.
The fruit and its tree.
A lowly person; a peasant or serf; a labourer who is obliged to do menial work.
A little mass of lead, or the like, attached to a line, and used by builders, etc., to indicate a vertical direction.
(medicine, archaic) Yaws.
(botany) A type of fruit in which the often edible flesh arises from the swollen base of the flower and not from the carpels.
(by extension) Any loud and joyous song; a song of triumph.
A female peafowl.
Any grass of the genus Poa, especially Poa annua.
A surname.
A surname from French.
Alternative form of powan [Coregonus clupeoides, a species of freshwater whitefish endemic to Loch Lomond in Scotland.]
A competition in which both professional and amateur competitors participate.
A town and district in the General Alvear Department, Mendoza, Argentina.
(chiefly informal) Clipping of biomedicine [The application of biology and physiology to clinical medicine.]
(Louisiana, Louisiana Creole) A surname, especially common among Louisiana Creoles.
(adj)
Alternative spelling of ho-hum. [(dated, US, Canada) Boring; not interesting or novel.]
payment
informal terms for urination
(electrochemistry) Initialism of polymer electrolyte membrane.
The act of one who paws.
A surname from Old English.
Abbreviation of pipeline end manifold.
(chiefly South Wales) To swell or inflate; to fill up.
An instance of throwing a pie at someone, often a politician or other powerful or influential person as a means of protest.
The inner and somewhat concave part of the human hand or other primate hand that extends from the wrist to the bases of the fingers.
(US) Cooking spray.
(anatomy) The pia mater, the innermost of the meninges that protect the brain and spinal cord.
The sound made by an elastic object (such as a spring) when bouncing; the sound of a bounce.
The act of bending at the waist, as a sign of respect or greeting.
(particle physics) Any of three semistable mesons, having positive, negative or neutral charge, composed of up and down quarks/antiquarks.
(aviation) A US aerospace company known for their commercial aircraft.
A dish served in the parmigiana style (combined with cheese and coated with tomato sauce before baking).
A suburb of the borough of Southwark, Greater London, England (OS grid ref TQ3476).
A type of bit used on the bridle of a horse, consisting of a mouthpiece, a shank, and two rings on each side.
A dish from the Indian subcontinent, made from an animal's trotters cooked with herbs and spices.
Olof Palme, Swedish Prime Minister.
(chemistry, dated) dicyandiamide
A mnemonic to aid in memorizing the digits of pi.
(N)
The ("Increased [Er]ya") a Chinese dictionary compiled by Song Dynasty scholar Lu Dian.
(poetry) A foot containing any pattern of three short syllables and one long syllable.
(New Zealand) Any of several large, edible abalones of New Zealand, especially Haliotis iris, whose shell is used to make jewelry.
small genus of variable annual eurasian vines: peas
(historical) A Roman military javelin.
In Carnatic music, a type of short song, or the accompanying dance.
a Serbian masculine given name, a diminutive form of Pavle.
(or , and ) an ancient city of Egypt.
Alternative form of pen name. [A fictitious name used by an author in place of their actual name; a writer's pseudonym.]
(obsolete) To palm off by fraud; to cheat or swindle
a Finnishhttp://verkkopalvelu.vrk.fi/Nimipalvelu/default.asp?L=1 nimipalvelu and Estonian feminine given name.