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Words that sound like "slender" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Thin; slim.
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(n)
Magnificent appearance, display or grandeur.
Someone who sends.
A person who rides a sled.
A surname.
Any object in the form of a circular cylinder.
(v)
(transitive) To break or separate or to break apart, especially with force.
(dialectal or archaic) To slip or slide, especially clumsily, or in a gingerly, timorous way.
A person from Iceland or of Icelandic descent.
A box, in the form of a book, used for keeping botanical specimens etc; drop-spine or clamshell box
A surname from German.
The point in the interior of a circle that is equidistant from all points on the circumference.
(intransitive or reflexive) To give oneself up into the power of another, especially as a prisoner; to submit or give in.
Australia, British, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, and South Africa standard spelling of center.
A machine to mechanize the process of sanding.
Agent noun of slide: that which slides.
A person who lives on an island.
Something or someone who makes a sound.
To utter a slanderous statement about; baselessly speak ill of; to wrong.
An English, Scottish, and occasionally Jewish patronymic surname derived from an old form of Alexander.
(N)
a Russian hip hop group formed in Moscow, Russia.
Obsolete form of slant. [A slope; an incline, inclination.]
One who slanders or defames the name or reputation of another person.
A surname from Swedish.
(dated) zander, pikeperch (fish)
A long, sharp fragment of material, often wood.
Someone who slings or who uses a sling.
A person who is trying to become slim by dieting.
To heat a compacted powder mass to form a hardened mass.
A person who or thing that slits.
Slender; thin.
An inhabitant of a slum.
(architecture) Alternative form of center. [The point in the interior of a circle that is equidistant from all points on the circumference.]
(intransitive) To visit a neighborhood of a status below one's own.
The property of being slimy.
(adv)
(law) deliberately, knowingly
(transitive, ditransitive) To make something (such as an object or message) go from one place to another (or to someone).
(uncountable) The killing of animals, generally for food.
A small, light vehicle with runners, used recreationally, mostly by children, for sliding down snow-covered hills; no draft animal pulls it.
A machine with sharp rotating blades in a bowl, for mashing, crushing, or liquefying food ingredients.
(transitive) To pillage, take or destroy all the goods of, by force (as in war); to raid, sack.
(slang, usually "the slammer") Jail, prison.
A slope; an incline, inclination.
Packed, crowded, (of a venue) full of would-be customers.
(intransitive) To stroll, or walk at a leisurely pace.
A person who spends money.
One who lends, especially money; specifically, a bank or other entity that specializes in granting loans.
A harsh critic; one who slates or denigrates something.
Splenda is a global brand of sugar substitutes and reduced-calorie food products.
covered with or resembling slime
(intransitive) To heave upward.
(dated) to saunter
To be awkward, careless, or negligent, especially with regard to dress and neatness.
(informal) slanted
The capital city of Miyagi Prefecture, in northern Honshu, Japan.
One who slights.
(agent noun) Someone or something that slots (that is, makes slots).
A person or thing that ascends.
A surname from Dutch.
(fandom slang, rare) A fan of the television series The Sentinel.
A small piece or fragment; a thin slice; splinter
Thinly, slightly, delicately.
(transitive) To make more slender.
(British) Initialism of Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.
A person to whom something is sent