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Words that sound like "scamper" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
(intransitive) To run lightly and quickly, especially in a playful or undignified manner.
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(n)
A mischievous person, especially a playful, impish youngster.
(slang) A person who commits fraud by making dishonest scams and business deals: swindler, cheat, grifter.
A Norway lobster (Nephrops norvegicus).
(adj)
Achieved by a scampering motion.
(N)
a Lithuanian pop band.
A fish of the genus Scomber.
(nautical) The master of a ship.
A device which scans documents in order to convert them to a digital medium.
Something that scoops.
One who plots or schemes, who formulates devious plans.
(of a garment) Very small, light, or revealing.
(intransitive) To smile in a foolish, frivolous, self-conscious, coy, obsequious, or smug manner.
To make insufficient allowance for; to scant; to scrimp.
One who stamps.
(crime) A device used to read and record the magnetic code from a credit card for later fraudulent use.
(transitive, UK) To thwart or destroy, especially something belonging or pertaining to another.
(adv)
(music, as a qualifier) always, still; maintaining the same style
(soccer, derogatory) someone connected with Southampton Football Club, as a fan, player, coach etc.
Alternative form of scampi. [A Norway lobster (Nephrops norvegicus).]
The property of being skimpy.
Alternative form of sambar. [(zoology) A Southeast Asian deer (Rusa unicolor).]
One who scambles.
(dated) To skimp; to do something in a skimpy or slipshod fashion.
A fraudulent deal.
US standard spelling of sombre. [Dark; gloomy; shadowy, dimly lit.]
A person who camps, especially in a tent etc.
(computing) A program or process that scrapes data, such as a screen-scraper.
Someone who skins animals.
a 2019 Japanese-language TV series starring Yosuke Sugino and Tomoya Maeno.
(nautical) A sailing ship with two or more masts, all with fore-and-aft sails; if two masted, having a foremast and a mainmast.
A person who fights doggedly, who exhibits indomitable will.
One who stomps.
(informal) Thin, generally in a negative sense (as opposed to slim, which is thin in a positive sense).
A representative selection of a larger group.
(informal) A difficult puzzle or problem.
A quick, light running motion.
(chiefly US) An article of food consisting of coarse ground maize, or a porridge made from it.
(bodybuilding, exercise, colloquial) The scapula.
An island of Eastern Visayas, Visayas, Philippines.
Someone or something that swamps or overwhelms.
A surname from German.
Sparse; scanty.
To be sick of.
(UK, dialect, transitive) To catch at; to snatch.
(Servicio de Asistencia Municipal de Urgencia y Rescate) a specialized emergency system of Madrid, Spain.
A small piece or quantity.
The numeral 900.
Resembling a scamp; knavish.
(obsolete) A machine for pressing the water from skins in tanning.
(US) A wicker or plastic basket specifically for holding laundry (from clothes hamper).
One who champs (bites or chews).
A surname from Italian.
(obsolete, transitive) To encumber; to crush; to overwhelm.
A slight convexity, arching or curvature of a surface of a road, beam, roof, ship's deck etc., so that liquids will flow off the sides.
(Australia, informal, colloquial) A sandwich.
A surname.
A person who escapes.
A person who enters many competitions in order to win as many prizes as possible.
(medicine) Initialism of comprehensive metabolic panel.
(now rare) A type of taste (sweetness, sourness etc.); loosely, taste, flavor.
A surname from Anglo-Norman.
(law, Scotland) To appear before a judge in court personally or by attorney.
A large city, district, and division of Uttar Pradesh, India.
Abbreviation of cyclic inosine monophosphate.
A river in northern France and in Wallonia, Belgium, a left-bank tributary of the Meuse.
(road transport, international law) The Convention on the Contract for the International Carriage of Goods by Road.