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Words that sound like "stomp" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
(ambitransitive) To trample heavily.
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(n)
A small piece of paper, with a design and a face value, used to prepay postage or other dues such as tax or licence fees.
The remains of something that has been cut off; especially the remains of a tree, the remains of a limb.
A surname.
(intransitive) To cease moving.
One who stomps.
A surname from German.
(adj)
(music) Of a stomping style of dance, or music appropriate to such a dance.
An advance or movement made from one foot to the other; a pace.
The stock of a family; a race or generation of progenitors.
The hot gaseous form of water, formed when water changes from the liquid phase to the gas phase (at or above its boiling point temperature).
Of a near-vertical gradient; of a slope, surface, curve, etc. that proceeds upward at an angle near vertical.
To bend the upper part of the body forward and downward to a half-squatting position; crouch.
(colloquial, figurative) Erotic.
(informal) Perplexed, confused.
marked with the impression of a seal
(cricket) close of play (when the stumps are pulled out of the ground by the umpires)
(originally African-American Vernacular, derogatory) A man who foolishly overvalues and defers to a woman, putting her on a pedestal.
Like or resembling a stump; short and cut off.
(obsolete) To value, to esteem.
(UK, dialect, obsolete) Confusion.
The grasslands of Eastern Europe and Asia.
A mining excavation in the form of a terrace of steps.
To thwart or stump; to cause to fail or to leave hopelessly puzzled, confused, or stuck.
(obsolete) Unfermented grape juice; must.
A hollow or pit into which liquid drains, such as a cesspool, cesspit or sink.
(obsolete) Pronunciation spelling of stop. [(intransitive) To cease moving.]
(informal, uncountable) Sensory stimulation.
(informal) To stipulate.
One who stamps.
The stem of a mushroom, kelp, etc.
(informal) A difficult puzzle or problem.
a glimpse
(chiefly US) An article of food consisting of coarse ground maize, or a porridge made from it.
(N)
a village in the municipality of Sjenica, Serbia.
A receptacle for holy water, especially a basin set at the entrance of a church.
(slang) A stupid person or (rarely) thing.
(dialect) A staple
A raised veranda in front of a house.
(intransitive) To remain awake; to not go to bed.
Alternative spelling of stymie. [To thwart or stump; to cause to fail or to leave hopelessly puzzled, confused, or stuck.]
(medicine) Initialism of comprehensive metabolic panel.
A surname from Italian.
(dialectal, Appalachia, Northern England, Scotland) A stick, twig or peg, especially in roofing or matting.
Obsolete spelling of stipe. [The stem of a mushroom, kelp, etc.]
Resembling, or characterised by, stems.
(Australia, education) Acronym of School Environmental Management Plan.
Alternative form of stum. [(transitive, obsolete) To ferment.]
(Quebec) A hot dog made of a steamed sausage in a bun, often topped with onion and mustard.
(medicine) Acronym of ST elevation myocardial infarction.
Abbreviation of cyclic inosine monophosphate.
A lesbian, chiefly African-American, exhibiting both stud and femme traits.
a former municipality in the Maloja district of the Swiss canton, Graubünden.
(transitive) To bring (a steam boiler) up to working steam pressure: to build up a head of steam inside (a boiler).
(Scotland, England) Alternative form of stoup. [(obsolete) A bucket.]
an American rock band formed in Houston, Texas, in 1969.
(Lincolnshire, obsolete or historical) An area of land equivalent to a quarter of an acre; a rood; a stang.
(religion, music) A sacred song; a poetical composition for use in the praise or worship of God.
To stop up; to plug.
An instance of psyops: a psychological operation, usually of a clandestine sort.