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Words that sound like "truth" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
True facts, genuine depiction or statements of reality.
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(countable, archaic) A pledge or promise to marry someone.
A surname from German.
(adj)
(of a statement) Conforming to the actual state of reality or fact; factually correct.
A hard, calcareous structure present in the mouth of many vertebrate animals, generally used for biting and chewing food.
A period of time in which no fighting takes place due to an agreement between the opposed parties.
(Internet slang, text messaging) Abbreviation of true. [(of a statement) Conforming to the actual state of reality or fact; factually correct.]
The state of being in alignment.
A surname.
(New Zealand, US) Trousers.
(by extension) A conspiracy theorist who does not believe the accepted story about some significant event, fact, etc.
(British) Trousers, especially if close-fitting and tartan.
(programming) Evaluating to true in a Boolean context.
A male given name.
Nonstandard spelling of true. [(of a statement) Conforming to the actual state of reality or fact; factually correct.]
A surname from Chinese.
truffle
(N)
a Dutch daily newspaper appearing in compact size.
(obsolete) drought
A perennial woody plant taller and larger than a shrub with a wooden trunk and, at some distance from the ground, having leaves and branches.
"Trees" is a lyric poem by American poet Joyce Kilmer.
A mark left by something that has passed along.
(v)
Dated spelling of teethe (“to grow teeth”).
(transitive) To entertain with food or drink, especially at one's own expense; to show hospitality to; to pay for as celebration or reward.
An act of tracing.
A small, typically rectangular or round, flat, and rigid object upon which things are carried.
(biology, psychology) An identifying characteristic, habit or trend.
A slow or difficult journey.
A braid, knot, or curl, of hair; a ringlet.
A male given name from English of modern usage, derived from the nickname.
Synonym of iridescent shark (“a shark catfish of species Pangasianodon hypophthalmus”).
A contribution to one's religious community or congregation of worship (notably to the LDS church).
A homoiconic string-processing programming language used from around 1965 to 1985.
Archaic form of trek. [(intransitive) To make a slow or arduous journey.]
(intransitive) To bite on something to relieve discomfort caused by growing teeth.
(intransitive) To exhibit the characteristic tics of Tourette syndrome.
(Armour Star Treet) a canned lunch meat product similar to Spam first introduced in 1939 by Armour and Company in the United States.
The ninth letter of many Semitic alphabets/abjads (Phoenician, Aramaic, Hebrew, Syriac, Arabic and others).
A surname from Hungarian.
A city in Thailand.
A wide, flat river valley.
a state constituency in Pahang, Malaysia, that has been represented in the Pahang State Legislative Assembly.
(music, informal) The vibrato system on a guitar.
(obsolete) tight; nimble
A coarse sort of plaster or mortar, durable in water, and used to line cisterns and other reservoirs of water.
A male given name from Sanskrit used in India.
A ghost town in Cherokee County, Kansas, United States.
(historical) A hamlet in Britain in pre-Saxon times.
(UK, dialectal, agriculture, historical or archaic, Scotland) The dung of livestock left on a field to serve as manure or fertiliser.
Abbreviation of traffic. [Moving pedestrians or vehicles, or the flux or passage thereof.]
(Quebec) Terrace, patio.
Alternative spelling of treyf. [(Judaism) Nonkosher.]
to trudge
(espionage) A covert meeting.
A river that flows in Georgia and Russia.
a head of hair, particularly when the hair is of length
(literary) Earth, soil, land, or ground as a physical surface.
torose
(Judaism) Nonkosher.
(informal) A trattoria.