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Words that sound like "ponder" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
To consider (something) carefully and thoroughly.
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(n)
A vessel in which something is pounded, or an implement used in pounding.
(intransitive) To tempt with, to appeal or cater to (improper motivations, etc.); to assist in gratification.
(US, dialectal, especially Southern US) A peanut, the nut-like pod containing the edible seed(s) of a leguminous plant.
A surname.
To pander (assist in the gratification of).
(Scotland) The keeper of a cattle pound; a pinder.
A machine or substance used to make a bond, or a person who uses such.
An inland body of standing water, either natural or man-made, that is smaller than a lake.
An artist who paints pictures.
Anything that points or is used for pointing.
(UK, Ireland, Commonwealth, slang) One who gambles or bets.
One who pants.
(UK, dated) A dishonourable man; a cad.
(in combinations, UK, slang) The drinking of a certain number of pints of beer
A Garifuna style of festive music and dance.
A person who ponders; a thinker.
A surname originating as an occupation for a maker of cord.
(adj)
Resembling a pond; pondlike
A municipality of Bulacan, Philippines.
One who creates and broadcasts podcasts.
Alternative form of paneer. [A soft, non-matured, Indian cheese.]
A surname meaning "the head/end of the land" (penn an tir) in the Cornish language.
(intransitive) To move without purpose or specified destination; often in search of livelihood.
(slang) A bout of heavy drinking.
Someone who binds.
(birdwatching) Someone who bands birds.
A unit of measurement for land area used in the Low Countries.
A unit of mass equal to 16 avoirdupois ounces (= 453.592 g). Today this value is the most common meaning of "pound" as a unit of weight.
The fine particles which are the result of reducing a dry substance by pounding, grinding, or triturating, or the result of decay; dust.
(transitive) To give as security on a loan of money; especially, to deposit (something) at a pawn shop.
(cricket) leg bye
A surname
One who pawns an item.
One who makes pots and other ceramic wares.
Having (a specified kind or number of) pins.
(transitive) To pillage, take or destroy all the goods of, by force (as in war); to raid, sack.
A placename
(obsolete) winged; having plumes
In pain, especially in an emotional sense.
(transitive) To consider pending; to delay or postpone (something).
to pose until nearly frozen in all sorts of uncomfortable positions.
(intransitive) To long, to yearn so much that it causes suffering.
(transitive) To wash in a pan (of earth, sand etc. when searching for gold).
A headdress like a cap, with long lappets.
One who pens; a writer.
(transitive, Northern England) To confine within narrow limits, constrain.
A soft, non-matured, Indian cheese.
(transitive) To strike on the palm of the hand with a strap as a school punishment.
A large basket or bag fastened, usually in pairs, to the back of a bicycle or pack animal, or carried in pairs over the shoulders.
(Australia, UK, slang) A pandemic (chiefly in reference to the COVID-19 pandemic).
(zoology) Having or bearing a palm or palms.
(Southern US) Someone who lives in a region where pine trees grow; a pinelander.
a highwayman who robs on foot
One who pans.
One who panders.
A male given name from Danish, equivalent to English Peter.
(obsolete, Scotland) A seizure of property etc in lieu of a debt; the animal or property so seized
(often in combination) Having panes.
(N)
a feminine given name of Senegalese origin.
An Ancient Greek lyric poet from Thebes (ca. 522–443 BC).
Alternative form of peddar. [(obsolete) A person who takes goods for sale in a basket from place to place; a peddler.]
(Hinduism) A ball of cooked rice mixed with ghee and black sesame seeds offered to ancestors during Hindu funeral rites and ancestor worship rituals.
One who hounds or harasses somebody.
A surname from Welsh.
(music) An alto, tenor, or bass instrument of the shawm family.
Archaic form of Pidie (“a regency of Indonesia”). [A regency of Aceh special region in Indonesia.]
A surname from French.
To shape metal by striking it, especially with a peen.
a well-known Afrikaans surname, derived from the French Pinard.