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Words that sound like "watch" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
A portable or wearable timepiece.
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A surname from Polish.
A person (now usually particularly a woman) who uses magical or similar supernatural powers to influence or predict events.
(v)
(transitive) To clean with water.
(N)
In computing, which is a command for various operating systems used to identify the location of executables.
A wich town, particularly one of several former salt mining towns in Cheshire with a name ending -wich.
(chiefly UK, Ireland, colloquial) A bulk mass, usually of small items, particularly money; a wad
A surname.
A brine spring or well.
(Ulster) thick slice of bread
(now chiefly Scotland) To move irregularly up and down.
(now colloquial) Used in phrases with existential there when the semantic subject is (usually third-person) plural.
A desire, hope, or longing for something or for something to happen.
The currency of Korea, worth 100 jun in North Korea and 100 jeon in South Korea.
(adj)
Monitored.
A male given name from Manx or Spanish, equivalent to English John.
In Japanese society, the favouring of a harmonious community over one's personal interests.
Pale, sickly-looking.
A breathy sound like that of an object passing at high speed.
Someone who watches or observes.
(cooking) A large, round-bottomed cooking pan used in East Asian cooking.
(music) wah-wah.
Alternative form of whoosh. [A breathy sound like that of an object passing at high speed.]
A piece, pattern, or sample, generally of cloth or a similar material.
(archaic) To know (in the sense of knowing a fact).
Alternative form of wazz (“act of urination”). [(chiefly UK, slang) An act of urination, a piss or a leak; urine.]
Obsolete spelling of wish. [(transitive) To desire; to want.]
(informal) American inventor Steve Wozniak (b. 1950).
A village in Byland with Wass parish, North Yorkshire, England, previously in Ryedale district (OS grid ref SE5579).
Alternative form of wa (“Thai unit of length”). [A traditional proa-style outrigger canoe of the Caroline Islands.]
(poetic, archaic) A horse.
(law enforcement) Initialism of officer-involved shooting. [(US, euphemistic) An incident in which a police officer shoots at another person.]
(computing) Acronym of workplace as a service.
A town in Nowata County, Oklahoma, United States
The twenty-seventh letter of the Arabic alphabet: و.
A river, a distributary of the Rhine in Western Europe that runs through the Netherlands.
A surname
(Hebrew: יוֹאָח) a Hebrew masculine given name, which means "Yahu is his brother" or "God is his brother."
A surname from German.
A municipality of Lanao del Sur, Philippines.
(channel 2) a television station licensed to Daytona Beach, Florida, United States, serving the Orlando area as an affiliate of NBC.
Initialism of woman of color or women of color.
(also Waccho; probably from Waldchis) king of the Lombards before they entered Italy from an unknown date (perhaps c. 510) until his death in 539.
A hearty Ethiopian or Eritrean stew.
A district of Porz borough, in south-east Cologne, Germany.
a village in the Nyirol County of Jonglei State, in the Greater Upper Nile region of South Sudan.
a commercial radio station in Buffalo, New York, serving Western New York.
(US, military, historical) A member of the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps.
(informal) A level or degree.
(chiefly African-American Vernacular) Clipping of biatch.
(chiefly Australia, mineralogy, gemmology) A type of rough opal without colour, and therefore not worth selling.
Alternative form of rotche. [A small alcid of the north Atlantic, the little auk, Alle alle.]
(Scotland) A cough or gasp
A surname from Hungarian.
(rare, obsolete) Squat, pudgy, fat.