Show me
of
Words that sound like "test" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
A challenge, trial.
Relevance: 0%
(law) A witness.
One of the sensations produced by the tongue in response to certain chemicals; the quality of giving this sensation.
(chiefly uncountable) Bread that has been toasted (cooked lightly by browning).
(v)
To throw with an initial upward direction.
Obsolete spelling of taste. [One of the sensations produced by the tongue in response to certain chemicals; the quality of giving this sensation.]
Obsolete spelling of toast. [(chiefly uncountable) Bread that has been toasted (cooked lightly by browning).]
A surname.
A small anvil.
Clipping of destination. [(countable) The place set for the end of a journey, or to which something is sent; place or point aimed at.]
Fine particles.
A writing consisting of multiple glyphs, characters, symbols or sentences.
A diminutive of the female given name Teresa.
(transitive) To affirm to be correct, true, or genuine.
(adj)
Easily annoyed, irritable.
A person who administers a test.
A diminutive of the female given name Teresa, from Ancient Greek.
(golf) A flat area of ground from which players hit their first shots on a golf hole.
(anatomy) A testicle of a vertebrate.
(informal, fishkeeping) A tetra (freshwater fish).
(Internet slang) Abbreviation of distribution. [An act of distributing or state of being distributed.]
having inflections to indicate tense
(botany) A seed coat.
(text messaging) text, text message
(Philippines) A diminutive of the female given names Teresita or Teresa, from Spanish.
(colloquial) Someone who is tested or examined.
Having tresses.
testosterone, especially pharmaceutical testosterone
Alternative form of tetched. [(chiefly US, colloquial) Touched: mildly deranged, somewhat mentally dysfunctional.]
A series of examinations carried out by an optician to assess a patient's vision.
(chiefly US, colloquial) Touched: mildly deranged, somewhat mentally dysfunctional.
(N)
"Tsst" is the seventh episode in the tenth season of the American animated television series South Park.
(obsolete) Command, injunction.
(anatomy) The portion of the human body from the base of the neck to the top of the abdomen; the homologous area in some other animals.
The direction opposite to that of the earth's rotation, specifically 270°.
(by extension) Enthusiasm; keen enjoyment; relish; gusto.
(cooking, food) Cut up into small pieces, especially cubes, typically about ¼″ to ½″ square (about 6 to 13 mm square).
"Dosed" is a song by the Red Hot Chili Peppers from their 2002 album, By the Way.
(transitive) To put out; to extinguish.
Alternative form of cestus (“woman's girdle”). [A leather fighting glove, frequently weighted with metal.]
A surname from German.
(Northern US) dare (infinitive).
(euphemistic, dated) Damned.
The Jewish attribute of grace, kindness or love; one of the sephiroth
A surname from French, equivalent to English August or Austin.
(intransitive, British and Ireland) To avoid work, shirk, etc.
Obsolete form of dowse.
Confidence in or reliance on some person or quality.
A twisting force.
Emotionally moved (by), made to feel emotion (by).
(chiefly in the plural) A person's breast or nipple.
To make a tut tut sound of disapproval.
A prearranged meeting or assignation, now especially between lovers to meet at a specific place and time.
a river of the Province of Albacete, Spain.
(obsolete, form of tryst) (secret meeting).
(nonce word) To make a hissing sound.
a Spanish jewelry, accessories and fashion retailer which was founded by Salvador Tous Blavi and Teresa Ponsa Mas.
bound or secured closely
An autistic person, a person with autism.
(Ireland, slang) Students doing a transition year.
(transitive) To rumple, tousle.
(Internet) Initialism of The Young Turks.
Furnished with tusks; having tusks.
Alternative form of tussar. [A deep gold-coloured silk produced from larvae of several species of silk worms belonging to the moth genus Antheraea]
(intransitive) To make a hiss, a sibilant sound of air escaping.
History (in journal titles such as "J Hist Neurosci" - "Journal of the History of Neuroscience").