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Words that sound like "racket" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
To play a game that involves using a racquet.
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(n)
(music) An old wind instrument of the double bassoon kind, having ventages but not keys.
A surname from Anglo-Norman.
A surname transferred from the given name.
A surname.
(military, nautical) To go to sleep as a group for the night; (by extension) to go to bed.
A long vehicle or craft propelled by a rocket engine; a missile or rocket-propelled spacecraft.
to cut again.
A herb of the mustard family (Eruca sativa), with pungently flavored leaves often eaten in salads.
A fixture attached to a wall to hold up a shelf.
To place in or hang on a rack.
To get again.
(slang, intransitive) To party to or play rock music, punk rock, grunge or heavy metal.
(transitive, usually passive voice) To wreck, especially a ship.
An unincorporated community in the town of Washington, Eau Claire County, Wisconsin, United States.
a stew of meat and vegetables mixed together
Initialism of Royal Automobile Club of Tasmania.
a game for two or four players, played in an enclosed court with a small hard fast-moving ball
(adj)
(informal) Making a racket; noisy.
To coat again (as with paint).
One who is skilled in racket sports.
(idiomatic) To cope; to be successful in something despite adversity.
A ratchet wrench.
In tatters, having the texture broken.
The game of racquets.
A surname from Italian.
(sports) A game played outdoors with bats and a ball between two teams of eleven, popular in England and many Commonwealth countries.
Destroyed, usually in an accident; damaged to the point of unusability.
(transitive and intransitive) To move gently back and forth.
(brewing) The process of clarifying, and thereby deterring further fermentation of, beer, wine or cider by draining or siphoning it from the dregs.
Any of the eight-legged creatures, including spiders, mites, and scorpions, of the class Arachnida.
A number of places in the United States:
sloping
(transitive, intransitive (usually with of or for), archaic) To take account of (someone or something); to care for; to consider, to heed, to regard.
(computer graphics) Clipping of rectangle. [(geometry) Any quadrilateral having opposing sides parallel and four right angles.]
(pathology) A disorder of infancy and early childhood due to a deficiency of vitamin D, causing soft or weak bones.
(transitive) To cause harm; to afflict; to inflict; to harm or injure; to let out harm.
(intransitive) To have or give off a strong, unpleasant smell.
The remains of something; a wreck.
A male given name from Sanskrit.
A surname originating as a patronymic.
(transitive) To cheat or swindle.
To carry a backpack while hiking or marching.
To heap up (hay, etc.) in ricks.
A spike for holding a single candle.
(transitive) To code again or differently.
a drill bit that has hardened rotating rollers
Lifted up; raised; erect.
A set of items used by medical personnel for gathering and preserving physical evidence following an allegation of sexual assault.
(transitive) To wet again.
(informal) A set of clothes; an outfit.
(historical) A liquor made of fermented ale and honey with spices.
(idiomatic, transitive) to provide with equipment or gear
(adv)
Used parenthetically in a verbatim quotation to correct an error in the source (compare sic, which notes an error without correcting it)
A surname from German.
A piece of clothing worn on the upper body outside a shirt or blouse, often waist length to thigh length.
(N)
a town and a Nagar panchayat in the Etah district of the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh.
(slang, intransitive, idiomatic) To depart in a hurry; to clear out.
(slang) To dance.