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Words that sound like "writer" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(n)
A person who writes, or produces literary work; an author can refer to themselves as "the writer".
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Someone who puts right; someone who does justice or redresses wrong.
(historical) A German cavalry soldier of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries.
A surname.
A mounted person.
(countable) A surname originating as an occupation for a rider, cavalryman, or knight.
One who provides a rating or assessment.
A rotating part of a mechanical device; for example, in an electric motor, generator, alternator, or pump.
(UK, Australia, slang) A despicable, worthless person; a scoundrel.
(US, slang) One who roots for, or applauds, something.
knight
(historical) A set of instructions for navigating a course at sea; a pilot's book or seaman's guide.
Anything which catches rats, especially a dog trained to catch them; a rat terrier.
A surname from German
One who rets.
(archaic) A rhetorician.
A surname from German.
(v)
To utter again.
(adj)
Complying with justice, correctness, or reason; correct, just, true. See also the interjection senses below.
(ambitransitive) To form letters, words or symbols on a surface in order to communicate.
Emitting much light; visually dazzling; luminous, lucent, radiant.
A person who reads.
A religious custom.
One who engages in a raid; a plunderer.
(archaic except in compounds and in Scotland, dated) A builder or maker of something.
Someone or something which rises.
(US, informal) A right-handed person.
Lacking in refinement or civility; bad-mannered; discourteous.
(adv)
In this very place
One who, or that which, rids.
One who riots; part of the unruly violent crowd causing a riot.
(Oxford University slang, archaic) The Radcliffe Camera.
(UK, dialect, obsolete) sedge; seaweed
A roadster.
(phonetics) Initialism of retracted tongue root. [(linguistics, often attributive) An articulation involving retraction of the tongue root.]
Often in reference to a word or phrase: used so many times that it is commonplace, or no longer interesting or effective; worn out, hackneyed.
That which complies with justice, law or reason.
(regional) Distortion.
(UK) Acronym of Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations.
Bright and colourless; reflecting equal quantities of all frequencies of visible light.
Of two (or, rarely, more than two) things: the larger in size (bigger), in value, in importance etc.
(astronomy) A hemispherical pit created by the impact of a meteorite or other object.
(usually endearing, US, Australia) A creature, an animal.
a tool with which one grates, especially foods such as cheese, to facilitate getting small particles or shreds off a solid lump
A person who greets people on their arrival.
A dish made by deep-frying food coated in batter.
(nautical) A ship used mainly to carry freight.
One who or that which frets.
A comrade.
Unpaid debt.
One who arrives; usually, one who arrives in a specified way.
One who places another under arrest.
A device which mixes air with a substance, particularly soil or a liquid.
Someone or something that arouses.
Any organism that fruits.
Alternative form of arrester. [One who places another under arrest.]
french writer who was the embodiment of 18th century enlightenment (1694-1778)
100 aurar equal 1 krona
(archaic, transitive) To please; to gratify.
(inorganic chemistry) Any salt of auric acid.