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Words that sound like "wise" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Showing good judgement or the benefit of experience.
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(n)
Reason.
Alternative letter-case form of wies.
A surname.
(v)
(now colloquial) Used in phrases with existential there when the semantic subject is (usually third-person) plural.
(informal, US, sometimes figurative, usually preceded by a) A distance.
Great sadness or distress; a misfortune causing such sadness.
A person who is exceptionally clever, gifted or skilled in a particular area.
(informal) Someone who is remarkably skilled at something.
To breathe hard, and with an audible piping or whistling sound, as persons affected with asthma.
(transitive) To determine the weight of an object.
A characteristical surname from German.
(Australia, colloquial) A coward; a wuss.
Alternative form of wazz (“act of urination”). [(chiefly UK, slang) An act of urination, a piss or a leak; urine.]
(informal) An utterance of "wow".
Initialism of Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale.
(UK, colloquial) To urinate.
(N)
an Australian brand owned by Unilever that produces frozen ice confectionery and frozen fruit desserts.
(informal) American inventor Steve Wozniak (b. 1950).
(computing) Acronym of workplace as a service.
(Mid-Ulster) was
A former commune in the Marne department in northern France.
a Christian radio station licensed to Claxton, Georgia, United States.
A surname from German.
(chiefly UK, slang) To urinate.
Obsolete spelling of ice. [Water in frozen (solid) form.]
haste
Bright and colourless; reflecting equal quantities of all frequencies of visible light.
(adv)
(interrogative) For what cause, reason, or purpose.
(uncountable) Metal formed into a thin, even thread, now usually by being drawn through a hole in a steel die.
(slang, mildly derogatory) A weak, ineffectual, cowardly, or timid person.
A diminutive of the male given names Wesley or Weston.
An alcoholic beverage made by fermenting grape juice, with an ABV ranging from 5.5–16%.
(archaic) A living creature, especially a human being.
(intransitive) To utter a high-pitched cry.
A surname transferred from the nickname. A patronymic form of Wile.
(obsolete or archaic) To know.
(chiefly Scotland) To regard (someone) as guilty, to accuse, to blame, to fault.
A Thai greeting wherein the palms are brought together in front of the face or chest, sometimes accompanied with a bow.
(archaic or Scotland) meanwhile
(archaic) To know; to understand.
A village in Byland with Wass parish, North Yorkshire, England, previously in Ryedale district (OS grid ref SE5579).
Wesley Johnson known by his stage name
(UK, dialect) A bundle of straw, or other material, to relieve the pressure of burdens carried upon the head.
one of Emerson College's two radio stations (the other being campus station WECB), located in Boston, Massachusetts, United States.
A Y-shaped object: a wye level, wye-connected. Especially a Y-shaped connection of three sections of road or railroad track.
(Internet slang) White (racial sense).
A Jersey-born writer of the 12th century.
(less common) Alternative form of wuss. [(slang, mildly derogatory) A weak, ineffectual, cowardly, or timid person.]
(archaic) To show, teach, inform, guide, direct.
a landlocked federal republic in central europe
(computing) Initialism of Windows Image Acquisition.
A river in Lancashire, England, which flows into the Irish Sea at Fleetwood.
An English surname, a variant of Wiles
A mass of electric wires.
A brine spring or well.