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Words that sound like "world" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Formed from whorls; having whorls.
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(v)
(transitive) To throw (something) with force.
(nautical) To wind a chain or rope around in order to strengthen (especially a mast or yard).
Having wool of a specified kind.
Untamed; not domesticated.
Thinking about unpleasant things that have happened or that might happen; feeling afraid and unhappy.
(adv)
(figuratively) To a great extent; much; far.
(intransitive) To rotate, revolve, spin or turn rapidly.
(intransitive) To perform a twirl.
Mixed in a circular pattern with both original components distinguishable.
To handle with skill and ease, especially a weapon or tool.
(n)
A town in Franklin County, Maine, United States, named after Benjamin Weld.
Having a document specifying inheritance.
Each circle, volution or equivalent in a pattern of concentric circles, ovals, arcs, or a spiral.
Forest; woods.
Pertaining to a wall; surrounded by a wall
A surname from Middle English.
(N)
The wird (plural: awrād) is a regular litany and a mystical invocation practiced by , and in Islamic sufism.
Having wheels; on wheels.
(informal) That moves in a whirling motion.
(archaic) An open country.
(transitive) To surpass in skill or achievement.
(transitive) To entice or lure.
A surname.
(text messaging) Abbreviation of would. [Past tense of will; usually followed by a bare infinitive.]
(transitive) To occupy or entertain (someone) in order to let time pass.
Having a value of; proper to be exchanged for.
(Northern England (Yorkshire), Scotland) Of an object: derisorily small, tiny; of a person: puny, stunted.
(Internet, computing) Cyberspace and its penetration into the nonvirtual world.
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(chiefly South Australia) An Australian indigenous shelter made from small branches with the leaves still attached.
To mark with stripes; to wale.
Adorned with pearls.
(knitting) To use or create a purl stitch or stitches.
To roll or press a pattern of ridges or indentations into a part for grip.
Alternative spelling of knurl. [To roll or press a pattern of ridges or indentations into a part for grip.]
(intransitive) To droop or become limp and flaccid (as a dying leaf or flower).
(archaic, regional) An unforested or deforested plain, a grassland, a moor.
A surname from German.
A diminutive of the male given name Walter.
(intransitive) To cry out, as in sorrow or anguish.
Infested with parasitic worms.
A raised rib in knitted goods or fabric, especially corduroy.
(intransitive) To hunt for whales.
A person who, or thing that, whirls.
in a vehement outcry
curly
To give as a result or outcome; to produce or render.
rolled up and secured
(of wood) have a pattern from the grain of a tree burl
barren, not pregnant, not giving milk
Heard.
(by extension) To bind; to obligate to use or be associated with.
(ambitransitive, Scotland) To spin.
That has been perceived aurally.
"Held" is a song by Smog, released as his first single from his 1999 album Knock Knock.
A number of domestic animals assembled together under the watch or ownership of a keeper.
freed from illness or injury
(transitive) To transport by drawing or pulling, as with horses or oxen, or a motor vehicle.
Having a heel (often of a specified type, as in high-heeled etc.).
(weaving) Heddle.
the fibrous shaft or barb of a feather (especially that of the ostrich or peacock) used to make artificial flies for angling
To make hellish; to place (someone) in hell; to make (a place) into a hell.