Show me
of
Words that sound like "wish" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
A desire, hope, or longing for something or for something to happen.
Relevance: 0%
(v)
Obsolete spelling of wish. [(transitive) To desire; to want.]
(N)
(channel 2) a television station licensed to Daytona Beach, Florida, United States, serving the Orlando area as an affiliate of NBC.
A surname from German.
A person (now usually particularly a woman) who uses magical or similar supernatural powers to influence or predict events.
(transitive) To clean with water.
In computing, which is a command for various operating systems used to identify the location of executables.
A breathy sound like that of an object passing at high speed.
A wich town, particularly one of several former salt mining towns in Cheshire with a name ending -wich.
Alternative form of whoosh. [A breathy sound like that of an object passing at high speed.]
(poetic, archaic) A horse.
a commercial radio station in Buffalo, New York, serving Western New York.
Alternative form of hiss. [(intransitive) To make a hiss, a sibilant sound of air escaping.]
(adv)
(regional US, chiefly Midwest and West, informal) Along, together with others, in a group, etc.
A portable or wearable timepiece.
Humour, especially when clever or quick.
(adj)
(British, colloquial) sophisticated; fashionable; smooth.
(transitive) To desire; to want.
A person who is exceptionally clever, gifted or skilled in a particular area.
(informal) Someone who is remarkably skilled at something.
The smallest part or particle imaginable; an iota.
A municipality in Saint Gallen canton, Switzerland.
An adjustable dam placed across a river to regulate the flow of water downstream.
A surname.
Someone who makes a wish
(obsolete or archaic) To know.
A sibilant sound, especially that of rapid movement through the air.
A surname from Polish.
(archaic) To know; to understand.
Obsolete spelling of will. [One's independent faculty of choice; the ability to be able to exercise one's choice or intention.]
Alternative form of cuisse. [Defensive armour (especially of plate) for the thigh.]
(obsolete) spelling of wit
(Ulster) thick slice of bread
(archaic) To show, teach, inform, guide, direct.
(chiefly UK, Ireland, colloquial) A bulk mass, usually of small items, particularly money; a wad
(West Country, Cornwall, Devon) Sickly, weak.
A brine spring or well.
(UK dialectal, Scotland) Insipid; tasteless; delicate; having a pale and sickly look.
"Wish I" is the third single released by Welsh singer Jem from her debut album, Finally Woken.
(historical) A Native American tribe from present-day eastern Texas, part of the Caddo Confederacy.
(intransitive) To become quiet.
A village in Bulgaria.
A diminutive/nickname form of the given name Michael, Michel or Michelle.
A diminutive of the female given name Letitia.
(informal, Anishinaabe English terminology) Clipping of Anishinaabe/Nishnaabe.
To try to attract birds by making a sibilant noise (e.g. "psshh").
An Eastern European Jewish, or Yiddish, snack food consisting of a dumpling covered with a shell of baked or fried dough
A male given name from Sanskrit used in India.
(cooking) On a skewer.
A form of phishing using a telephone call to the prospective victim.
(now colloquial) Used in phrases with existential there when the semantic subject is (usually third-person) plural.
(transitive) To have on:
(uncountable, usually in combination) Goods or a type of goods offered for sale or use.
The Wel is a river in Poland.
a radio station in Syracuse, New York.
A village in Byland with Wass parish, North Yorkshire, England, previously in Ryedale district (OS grid ref SE5579).
(Scotland, obsolete) To spend.
(archaic) A red panda.
A town in New Hampshire, consolidated with Hillsborough County.
(channel 25) a television station in Evansville, Indiana, United States, affiliated with ABC.