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Words that sound like "yearn" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(v)
(intransitive, also figuratively) To have a strong desire for something or to do something; to long for or to do something.
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(adv)
(obsolete) eagerly, heartily, gladly, willingly, earnestly.
(n)
(uncountable) A twisted strand of fibre used for knitting or weaving.
A strong desire, urge, or yearning.
Either of the letters ъ and ь in Cyrillic alphabets, which originally represented phonemically the ultra-short vowels in Slavic languages.
(philosophy) A principle in Chinese and related East Asian philosophies associated with dark, cool, female, etc. elements of the natural world.
A surname.
(dated or dialectal) yonder.
A male given name, equivalent to English John.
(military, historical) Initialism of (member of) Indian other ranks.
A diminutive of the male given name Uriah.
A surname from Korean.
A male given name from Hebrew of biblical origin.
A census-designated place in Uinta County, Wyoming, United States.
Pronunciation spelling of year. [A period of time akin to the time taken for the Earth to undergo a full cycle of seasons.]
A village, the administrative centre of Gran municipality, Innlandet, Norway.
(N)
a French male given name, specifically, the Breton form of "Jean" (French for "John").
(transitive, archaic, of goats or sheep) To give birth to.
A surname from Dutch.
Alternative form of Ya'an. [A prefecture-level city of Sichuan, China.]
someone who yearns
A municipality of Luzon, Philippines; named for the city of Jaén, Spain.
(dialectal or poetic) Heron.
A village and civil parish in Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole district, Dorset, England (OS grid ref SZ1297).
(UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) Corner; nook; hiding-place.
To acquire, or attempt to acquire knowledge or an ability to do something.
To make a non-linear physical movement.
A generally tubular invertebrate of the annelid phylum; an earthworm.
(business, of a customer) To stop using a company's product or service.
(transitive, obsolete) To ornament; to adorn.
A diminutive of the male given name Arnold.
A diminutive of the male given name Vernon.
Pronunciation spelling of learn. [To acquire, or attempt to acquire knowledge or an ability to do something.]
European Council for Nuclear Research
(British) To make a grotesque or funny face; to grimace.
Jules Verne, French author, father of science fiction.
A small, rounded hill.
A male given name from the Germanic languages occasionally used in English.
(countable) Initialism of medical record number.
a river in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia in western Germany.
(obsolete) To grin.
(Scotland, Northern England) To whinge, moan, complain.
A surname
A department of Normandy, France.
Alternative form of sharn. [(chiefly Scotland) The dung or manure of cattle or sheep.]
Alternative form of quern. [A mill for grinding corn, especially a handmill made of two circular stones.]
(adj)
Abbreviation of green (eye or hair color). [Of a green hue.]
A village in Zealand, Denmark.
(poetic) Ireland
a small village below Mount Krn in the Municipality of Kobarid in the Littoral region of Slovenia (northwestern Slovenia).
Alternative spelling of kern. [(obsolete or dialect) A corn; grain; kernel.]
A minor river in Dorset, England, which joins the River Frome at Dorchester.
Colourless, drab, dull.
(Internet slang) Abbreviation of not right now.
Carl Jung (1875 – 1961), Swiss psychiatrist and psychotherapist who founded analytical psychology.
Eun, also spelled Un, or En, Ehn, Enn, Unn, is an uncommon Korean surname.