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Words that sound like "sink" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
(heading, physical) To move or be moved into something.
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(informal) To synchronize, especially in the senses of data synchronization, time synchronization, or synchronizing music with video.
(n)
(mathematics) Ellipsis of sinc function: f = sin(x)/x.
(dice games, card games, dominoes) A card, die, or domino with five spots or pips.
Archaic form of cinque. [(dice games, card games, dominoes) A card, die, or domino with five spots or pips.]
(US, military) Abbreviation of commander-in-chief.
Archaic form of skink (“animal”). [(Scotland, Northern England) A shin of beef.]
(adj)
doomed to extinction
(N)
a male Turkish given name.
A surname.
A surname from German.
A fine, soft cloth woven from silk fibers.
Obsolete spelling of silk. [(chiefly uncountable) A fine fiber excreted by the silkworm or other arthropod (such as a spider).]
(computing) A simple text file format for exchanging spreadsheet data.
(less common in the UK and Ireland) In poor health; ill.
(intransitive) To produce musical or harmonious sounds with one’s voice.
(intransitive) To have a strong bad smell.
(adv)
Thus; as written; used to indicate, for example, that text is being quoted as it is from the source.
(fishing) A weight used in fishing to cause the line or net to sink.
A surname from Hokkien common among Filipinos of Chinese ancestry.
A surname common in the states of Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and Madhya Pradesh in India.
(intransitive) To sneak about furtively.
(Australia, slang) Alternative form of sick (“cool, excellent”). [(less common in the UK and Ireland) In poor health; ill.]
A lizard of the family Scincidae, having small or reduced limbs or none at all and long tails that are regenerated when shed; a sandfish.
Alternative form of Qing. [Qing dynasty (1644–1912), the last imperial dynasty of China.]
The primrose.
(archaic) Toil, work, drudgery.
Eye dialect spelling of sick (“in poor health; ill”). [(less common in the UK and Ireland) In poor health; ill.]
Archaic spelling of seek. [(ambitransitive) To try to find; to look for; to search for.]
(computing) Abbreviation of asynchronous. [Not synchronous; occurring at different times.]
(obsolete) surrounded
(transitive) To ponder, to go over in one's mind.
(intransitive) To express ill humor or offence by remaining sullenly silent or withdrawn.
A narrow opening such as a fissure or crack.
(obsolete) A reaping hook.
(slang) The feeling of a drug taking hold.
(after a qualification) University of Winchester, used especially following post-nominal letters indicating status as a graduate.
(transitive) To use the mouth and lips to pull in (a liquid, especially milk from the breast).
A surname from Mandarin.
(informal) Second, ¹⁄₆₀ of a minute.
(uncountable) Courage; spirit; mettle; determination.
To stink; to smell bad.
(Philippines, education) Initialism of state university and college.
(UK, dialectal) A slough, a low, wet, miry place. (Compare slank.)
Only used in rent seck
Nonstandard spelling of suck. [(transitive) To use the mouth and lips to pull in (a liquid, especially milk from the breast).]
(Australia) Initialism of South East Queensland.
Carlos Isaías Morales Williams Boiro (born December 3, 1993), better known as Sech, is a Panamanian singer, songwriter and record producer.
A large or substantial portion of something.
(informal) Cigarette.
(informal) Something that is very easy to do.
(meteorology) Convective inhibition.
CIMB Group Holdings Berhad is a Malaysian universal bank headquartered in Kuala Lumpur and operating in high growth economies in ASEAN.