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Words that sound like "thrilled" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Extremely excited or delighted.
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(archaic) Enthralled; captive.
(v)
(ergative) To suddenly excite someone, or to give someone great pleasure; to (figuratively) electrify; to experience such a sensation.
(archaic) To pass through in the manner of a thread or a needle; to make or find a course through; to thread.
(by extension) To bind; to obligate to use or be associated with.
uttered with a trill
Having frills, frilly.
(n)
A cord formed by spinning or twisting together textile fibers or filaments into one or more continuous strands, typically used in needlework.
filled with great numbers crowded together
(film, literature) A suspenseful, sensational genre of story, book, play, film.
(N)
a Canadian brand of chewing gum.
(uncountable) The state of being under the control of another person.
(adv)
In a thorough or complete manner.
(transitive) To hurl; to release (an object) with some force from one’s hands, an apparatus, etc. so that it moves rapidly through the air.
(now rare, archaic) Thoroughly, completely.
A city, the seat of the Regional Municipality of Niagara, Ontario, Canada.
(transitive, now Northern England, Northern Ireland, Scotland) To endure, to put up with, to tolerate.
(intransitive) To creep; to move slowly on hands and knees, or by dragging the body along the ground.
trained in a skill by repetitious practice
Senses relating to a rolling motion.
(transitive) To follow behind (someone or something); to tail (someone or something).
To capture or round up.
(ambitransitive) To take (fish or other marine animals) with a trawl.
(intransitive) To sing in a joyful manner.
(transitive) To cause to be in danger; to imperil; to risk.
An indication of potential or imminent danger.
(textiles) Made with thrums (leftover warp thread) woven into the fabric.
(transitive, Northern England, Scotland) To thrust; crowd; press; squeeze.
The front part of the neck.
The ordinal form of the cardinal number three; Coming after the second.
Causing a feeling of sudden excitement.
(uncountable) The characteristic of using a minimum of something (especially money).
Cooked on a grill.
To beat mercilessly.
(transitive, archaic) To place on a royal seat; to enthrone.
One of the two long pieces of wood, extending before a vehicle, between which a horse is hitched; a shaft.
In the third place; third in a row.
A surname.
Alternative form of 3D.
To make a shrill noise.
A surname transferred from the given name.
Thrill Me: The Leopold & Loeb Story is a musical with a book, music, and lyrics by Stephen Dolginoff.
Alternative form of arilled (“having an aril”). [(botany) Having an aril.]
(mineralogy) A radioactive mineral, composed mostly of thorium silicate (ThSiO₄), along with silicates of uranium and the rare earths.
(zoology) Any thrips in the family Thripidae.
A city in southwestern North Macedonia.
(medicine, of vaccine) Inactivated.
(followed by with) That is now full.
curly
(transitive) To throw (something) with force.
(originally slang, uncountable) Credibility.
rolled up and secured
A strip of pleated fabric or paper used as decoration or trim.
Any of several small marine crustacean species of plankton in the order Euphausiacea in the class Malacostraca.
Having frills; frilled.
the second studio album by American rapper Rick Ross.
Ground by a mill.
(ambitransitive) To secrete saliva, especially in anticipation of food.
(transitive, law) To release (a prisoner) on the understanding that s/he checks in regularly and obeys the law.
ploughed or cultivated
(ambitransitive) To rove over, through, or about in a stealthy manner; especially, to search in, as for prey or booty.
Alternative form of trithing. [(historical) a riding (one of three ancient divisions of a county in England)]
a Scandinavian (Norse) surname, derived from the name of the god Frey (Freyr) - same derivation as the day of the week (Tuesday -Tws
(intransitive) To speak with a slow, spiritless utterance, as from affectation, laziness, or lack of interest.
Having hills.
a programming language for first-order predicate calculus.
A surname from Irish.
(transitive) To drink (or, rarely, eat) greedily or to excess.
Having quills or similar structures.
(of fabric) Having diagonal parallel ribs.
Obsolete spelling of mild. [Gentle and not easily angered.]
(archaic) The iris of the eye.
(UK, archaic) A long-tailed duck, of species Clangula hyemalis.
both a French masculine given name and a surname.
(archaic, intransitive) To jest, to joke.
A surname from German.
Packed in a barrel.