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Words that sound like "together" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adv)
At the same time, in the same place; in close association or proximity.
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(n)
A surname from Bengali.
A surname.
Something that toggles between two states or causes something else to toggle between two states.
A rope, cable etc. that holds something in place whilst allowing some movement.
Completely, wholly, or without exception.
(N)
Tugger may refer generally to something that tugs.
(informal) A meeting or gathering.
(now dialectal) An other; another one.
All at the same time.
(v)
(idiomatic, of two people) To be in a relationship.
(travel) The practice of arranging joint travel or vacations, as a group.
(transitive) To put the appropriate parts of (something) into a whole; to combine pieces that go together to create a finished object.
"Together Now" is a collaboration between French composer/producer Jean Michel Jarre and Japanese composer/producer Tetsuya Komuro.
fasten by sewing; do needlework
make an addition by combining numbers
A reminder.
french inventor of the first practical photographic process, the daguerreotype (1789-1851)
An overly enthusiastic or energetic person, often characterized by bouncing.
The action of something that tugs; a pull.
A Semitic language of northern Eritrea, closely related to Tigrinya.
A major river in Spain and Portugal, the longest in Iberia.
A river in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
Panthera tigris, a large predatory mammal of the cat family, indigenous to Asia.
(uncountable, colloquial, Australia, New Zealand) Food; tuck.
The player who tries to catch others in the game of tag.
Obsolete form of tiger. [Panthera tigris, a large predatory mammal of the cat family, indigenous to Asia.]
One who pays tithes.
A device given to infants to help soothe inflamed gums during teething, often filled with a fluid or gel that can be frozen or refrigerated.
(by extension) A conspiracy theorist who does not believe the accepted story about some significant event, fact, etc.
(toys) A larger toy, designed for children to ride in, which may be a pedal car or have some other source of locomotion.
A male given name from Japanese.
(engineering) A machine that cuts teeth in a component.
(intransitive, obsolete) Alternative form of degender (“to degenerate”). [(intransitive, obsolete) To degenerate.]
(adj)
(colloquial) Of low quality.
A unit of surface area equal to 10 ares (that is, 1,000 square metres, 0.10 hectares, or approximately 0.25 acres)
(dialectal, Northern England) To play football.
sheeppox
A device that performs degaussing.
A female given name from Welsh.
A cross between a male tiger and a lioness.
(historical) Synonym of ferrado, a traditional Galician unit of dry measure, mass, and land area
Resembling or relating to a tile; arranged like tiles; consisting of tiles
A district of Reinickendorf borough, Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
(literally, countable and uncountable) A collection of valuable things; accumulated wealth; a stock of money, jewels, etc.
A daycare centre.
Alternative form of daycare. [Daytime supervision, usually of children or pets.]
gather again, gather back together
That which causes decay.
the care that a reasonable man would exercise under the circumstances; the standard for determining legal duty
(transitive) To collect or gather in
The feel or shape of a surface or substance; the smoothness, roughness, softness, etc. of something.
A ticker tape, either the traditional paper kind or a scrolling message on a screen.
The act by which something is tagged.
A subarctic zone of evergreen coniferous forests situated south of the tundras and north of the steppes in the Northern Hemisphere.
A female given name from Welsh, variant of Tegan.
An old Thai measurement of weight, the baht, of about 15 grams.
(Australia, North Island New Zealand) The children′s game tag.
A surname from Norwegian.
A surname from Spanish.
One who tangles.
Alternative form of toego. [A short jacket-like garment with long sleeves, worn by women in Bhutan.]
A surname from German.
(UK, archaic, dialect) A hoisting apparatus such as an elevator, crane, or lift.
especially any of genus Tupinambis, which is sometimes kept as a pet.
(idiomatic, also figuratively) To shelter oneself.
US spelling of decolour. [(transitive) To deprive of colour; to bleach.]
Tagalog (language).
(archaeology) A flat Roman roof tile with raised edges, joined together by an imbrex.