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Words that sound like "scream" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
A physical divider intended to block an area from view, or provide shelter from something dangerous.
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(v)
(intransitive, originally US, often imperative) To leave in a hurry; to go away.
(rugby) In rugby union or rugby league, all the forwards joined together in an organised way.
(online gaming) A practice match between one or more organized teams usually in preparation for a more competitive format, such as a tournament.
Alternative form of scrim.
Obsolete form of screen. [A physical divider intended to block an area from view, or provide shelter from something dangerous.]
A systematic plan of future action.
Alternative spelling of ice cream. [(uncountable) A dessert made from frozen sweetened cream or a similar substance, usually flavoured.]
To run with quick light steps, to scamper.
One who screams; one who shouts; one who sings harshly.
(uncountable) A dessert made from frozen sweetened cream or a similar substance, usually flavoured.
(uncountable) Loose stony debris on a slope.
(UK, Ireland, slang) Food, especially that of an inferior quality; grub.
(N)
Lonnie Kimble (born January 3, 1990), better known by his stage name Skeme, is an American rapper from Inglewood, California.
(adj)
Loud and high-pitched; sounding like a scream.
Dated form of scurry. [To run with quick light steps, to scamper.]
(obsolete) A chest or other box for storing valuables.
(computing) Initialism of synchronous graphics random-access memory.
Any steady flow or succession of material, such as water, air, radio signal or words.
Calm, peaceful, unruffled.
A fraudulent deal.
(derogatory, slang) A reprehensible person or persons.
(countable) A high-pitched strident or piercing sound, such as that between a moving object and any surface.
(transitive) To read quickly or describe summarily, skipping some detail.
(informal) Crazy; silly; ridiculous
The motion of something that scurries.
To filter by passing through a screen.
A surname.
To magically or supernaturally look into or (as an entertainer) predict (the future), using crystal balls or other objects.
(intransitive) To be frugal, whether to a reasonable and wise extent or to a miserly and unwise extent.
(UK, archaic) A tern; the sea swallow.
(childish or colloquial, UK) Delicious.
One who, or that which, screens.
(uncommon) A slightly crumbly brined cheese made of cow, sheep, or goatmilk, similar to feta; popular in the Balkan Peninsula.
The activity or practice of making secret or underhanded plans.
An element of ancient Greek theater: the structure at the back of the stage.
To steal fruit, especially apples, from a garden or orchard.
(also attributively) A shutdown of a nuclear reactor (or, by extension, some other thing), often done rapidly due to an emergency.
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(US, fishing) An oilskin hat; a southwester.
(Old or New) Salisbury, England.
(Ireland, archaic) A sod of grass-grown turf from the surface of a bog or from a field.
(slang) Scrotum.
Alternative form of Seram (“Indonesian island”). [The largest island of Maluku province of Indonesia.]
A surname from Italian.
utter a harsh abrupt scream
Dirty or filthy.
(UK, dialect, transitive) To catch at; to snatch.
A room to be used by someone who is ill.
Alternative form of scrimp. [(transitive, sometimes with on) To make too small or short; to shortchange.]
A surname from Norwegian.
(informal) A screenshot.
A screw with a loop on one end and threads on the other end.
The space at sea necessary to manoeuvre a ship.
The largest island of Maluku province of Indonesia.
(obsolete) A buffoon.
A surname from Arabic.
Pertaining to sweat.
(ornithology) A fleshy, waxy area at the base of the upper beak in certain birds.
a town and comune in the province of Verona, Veneto, northern Italy.