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Words that sound like "word" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(N)
The wird (plural: awrād) is a regular litany and a mystical invocation practiced by , and in Islamic sufism.
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(n)
A surname.
(v)
Heard.
(adj)
That has been perceived aurally.
Past tense of will; usually followed by a bare infinitive.
A number of domestic animals assembled together under the watch or ownership of a keeper.
A surname originating as an occupation for a herdsman.
(historical) In Norwegian history, an informal retinue of personal armed companions, hirdmen or housecarls.
Lyrics.
(uncountable, informal, originally slang) Cannabis.
(intransitive) To be troubled; to give way to mental anxiety or doubt.
simple subjunctive of be
Having a large physical extent from side to side.
Having an unusually strange character or behaviour.
Protection, defence.
(transitive) To perform the marriage ceremony for; to join in matrimony.
Thinking about unpleasant things that have happened or that might happen; feeling afraid and unhappy.
Misspelling of weird. [Having an unusually strange character or behaviour.]
Equipped with wires, so as to connect to a power source or to other electric or electronic equipment; connected by wires.
Using an excessive number of words.
An amorphous, compact mass.
(obsolete or historical) A man; a male; a husband
A river in Essex, England, which flows past Widford before joining the River Can just outside Chelmsford.
Formed from whorls; having whorls.
A marriage ceremony; a ritual officially celebrating the beginning of a marriage.
Alternative spelling of whirr. [To move or vibrate (something) with a buzzing sound.]
A mass of electric wires.
(intransitive) To engage in conflict (may be followed by "with" to specify the foe).
Someone who words something a certain way; a turner of phrases.
Infested with parasitic worms.
(transitive) To have on:
A river in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, a tributary of the Rhine.
Having a value of; proper to be exchanged for.
Fate, destiny, particularly in an Anglo-Saxon or Old Norse context.
(obsolete) To protect or guard (especially oneself); to be on guard, be wary.
(dialectal) Mad.
Obsolete spelling of weed. [(countable) Any plant unwanted at the place where and at the time when it is growing.]
(mineralogy) Alternative form of wad. [An amorphous, compact mass.]
a non-commercial, listener-supported public radio station.
a village in the Dutch province of Zeeland.
(Internet slang) Filter-avoidance spelling of weed (“marijuana”).
(computing) Two-byte unsigned data, mainly used for a Unicode character.
(now chiefly UK dialectal) A point.
Alternative form of ord. [(now chiefly UK dialectal) A point.]
Having oars.
(chiefly African-American Vernacular, Philadelphia, slang) Okay; average; nothing special.
(of a show) Having been broadcast over the airwaves, such as on television or radio; loosely, having been broadcast via any medium.
(intransitive, formal) To make a mistake.
Having ears.
To make the low vocal sound of some birds.
(intransitive) To make the prolonged trilling sound of an insect (e.g. a grasshopper, a cicada).