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Words that sound like "thunder" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
The loud rumbling, cracking, or crashing sound caused by expansion of rapidly heated air around a lightning bolt.
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(v)
(intransitive) To make a noise like thunder.
One who thunders.
(adj)
Of weather: stormy, with thunder and lightning.
(transitive) To break or separate or to break apart, especially with force.
One who funds.
Something that thins or thins out (another thing).
mixed with water
The ball of the thumb, or the muscle controlling it.
Sensitive or painful to the touch.
Small dry sticks and finely-divided fibrous matter etc., used to help light a fire.
(transitive) To make difficult to accomplish; to act as an obstacle; to frustrate.
Someone who sends.
(US) panel of a car which encloses the wheel area, especially the front wheels.
A person who mends.
(N)
a masculine given name.
(in combination) Having some specific type of thumb.
A surname.
One who thumbs a lift; a hitchhiker.
Second largest city in Niger, locally called Damagaram.
One who hunts game for sport or for food; a huntsman or huntswoman.
A surname from French.
(adv)
(archaic or dialectal outside of Cumbria, Southern US) At or in a distant but indicated place.
One who finds or discovers something.
(chiefly humorous or in German or Yiddish contexts) Children.
One who founds or establishes (a company, project, organisation, state, etc.).
The state of being sincere and open in speech; honesty in expression.
A machine to mechanize the process of sanding.
Either of two New World vultures, Vultur gryphus of the Andes or Gymnogyps californianus, a nearly extinct vulture of the mountains of California.
One who minds, tends, or watches something such as a child, a machine, or cattle; a keeper.
A European freshwater fish in the family Percidae, closely related to the perch, Sander lucioperca.
A diminutive of the male given name Alexander, from Ancient Greek, of modern usage.
(UK, Commonwealth, Ireland, slang) Vomit.
Something or someone who makes a sound.
One who hands over or transmits; a conveyor in succession
(UK, Ireland, slang, derogatory) An ugly person.
An English, Scottish, and occasionally Jewish patronymic surname derived from an old form of Alexander.
(programming, informal) A double underscore, __.
To speak in a disorganized or desultory manner; to babble or prattle.
Abbreviation of contraction. [Senses relating to becoming involved with or entering into, especially entering into a contract.]
One who conns (conds) a ship; a conning officer.
One who hounds or harasses somebody.
(dated) zander, pikeperch (fish)
(Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia) A workman who oversees others in a factory or a plantation, typically an oil palm or rubber estate.
(music) An early form of lute that gave rise to the mandolin.
(idiomatic, figuratively, usually humorous) An unknown location; (by extension) apparent disappearance or nonexistence.
The point in the interior of a circle that is equidistant from all points on the circumference.
A wise and trusted counselor or teacher.
Australia, British, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, and South Africa standard spelling of center.
(transitive) To interpret, give an interpretation or rendition of.
One who lends, especially money; specifically, a bank or other entity that specializes in granting loans.
One who mints, particularly a moneyer producing coinage.
To heat a compacted powder mass to form a hardened mass.
one that hints
a Russian hip hop group formed in Moscow, Russia.
A framework upon which cloth is stretched and dried.
A unit of measurement for land area used in the Low Countries.
The Dender or Dendre is a long river in Belgium, the right tributary of the river Scheldt.
(architecture) Alternative form of center. [The point in the interior of a circle that is equidistant from all points on the circumference.]
(plural: qindarka or qintars) An Albanian coin equal to one hundredth of a lek.
Archaic form of render. [(ditransitive) To cause to become.]
(historical) A furnace or stove designed and used to maintain uniform heat, primarily used by alchemists.