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Words that sound like "straight" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Not crooked, curly, or bent; having a constant direction throughout its length.
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(n)
(geography) A narrow channel of water connecting two larger bodies of water.
A surname.
Obsolete spelling of straight. [Not crooked, curly, or bent; having a constant direction throughout its length.]
A paved part of road, usually in a village or a town.
(v)
(intransitive, by extension, also figuratively) To walk haughtily or proudly with one's head held high.
To act as a game master (GM) in a tabletop role-playing game, especially any of the games produced by White Wolf.
Having lost one's way; wandering; astray.
(informal) A Fender Stratocaster electric guitar.
(Scotland) straight
(obsolete, transitive) To cause to project or swell out; to enlarge affectedly; to strut.
Alternative letter-case form of St., abbreviation of street.
(obsolete, intransitive) To swell out; to strut.
A condition; a set of circumstances applying at any given time.
(intransitive) To walk with long steps.
(intransitive) To wander, as from a direct course; to deviate, or go out of the way.
(bodybuilding, sports) Any anabolic hormone used to promote muscle growth or athletic performance.
(N)
the third studio album by American rock band Jane's Addiction, released on July 22, 2003, on Capitol Records.
(slang) Synonym of straight (“a cigarette, particularly one containing tobacco instead of marijuana”).
(informal) Ellipsis of Dire Straits, a British rock band.
Something that is not crooked or bent such as a part of a road or track.
A kind of coarse wool used in blankets or for garment by Native Americans.
(obsolete, UK, Scotland, dialect) disturbance; annoyance; care
Having tooth-like projections on one side, as in a saw.
(organic chemistry) Any salt or ester of citric acid.
(dated, except strewn) To distribute objects or pieces of something over an area, especially in a random manner.
(UK, Northern England, dated) A place where a chasm or gorge is narrow enough to be crossed.
(obsolete) strain (tension of overexertion)
A small village and civil parish near Devizes, mid Wiltshire, England (OS grid ref SU0359).
(transitive) To mark something with striations.
(education) Pertaining to one who makes straight As.
(intransitive, video games) To sidestep; to move sideways without turning (a core mechanic of most first-person shooters).
Covered with straw.
Obsolete form of strew. [(dated, except strewn) To distribute objects or pieces of something over an area, especially in a random manner.]
(computing) To perform or repeat an action on each item in a set.
(countable) A dried stalk of a cereal plant.
Obsolete spelling of stayed.
(biology) A particular variety of a microbe, virus, or other organism, usually a taxonomically infraspecific one.
(of a person) Large; bulky.
(medicine) With no delay; at once.
set into a usually circular motion in order to mix or blend
(sometimes in combination) Having a strap or straps.
Under tension; tense.
a mountain in Sel Municipality in Innlandet county, Norway.
Not capricious or impulsive; sedate, serious, sober.
(US, cooking) A kind of layered casserole dish in American cuisine.
a town and comune in the Metropolitan City of Venice, Veneto, Italy.
A symbol used by proofreaders and typesetters to indicate that a word or phrase that was crossed out should still remain.
A wide, flat river valley.
(university slang) A sorority.
(nautical) A continuous line of plates or planks running from bow to stern that contributes to a vessel's skin. (FM 55-501).
A surname from Middle English.
A stage of progress
(Scotland, Northern England) A bounce or rebound.
french painter who developed pointilism (1859-1891)
A river in Ukraine and Romania; a tributary of the Danube.
A village and civil parish in Three Rivers district, Hertfordshire, England (OS grid ref TQ0499).
Having a stern of a particular shape or kind.
Alternative form of set aright. [(transitive) To correct, repair, adjust, amend.]
A dais or raised platform.
A pirate.
(transitive) Synonym of outstare.