A cutting tool that has a curved blade set at a right angle to the handle and is used in shaping wood.
verb
To shape a material using an adze.
azle
baez
baze
baze
verb
(transitive, obsolete) To stupefy; frighten; alarm.
daze
daze
noun
(mining) A glittering stone.
The state of being dazed
verb
(transitive) To stun or stupefy, for example with bright light, with a blow, with cold, or with fear
ezan
ezar
ezba
ezba
noun
In the Arab World, a plot of farmland with its associated buildings.
ezra
ezra
Proper noun
The fifteenth book of the Old Testament and a book of the Hebrew Tanakh.
A Jewish high priest from the fifth century.
name of biblical origin.
faze
faze
verb
(transitive, informal) To frighten or cause hesitation; to daunt, put off (usually used in the negative); to disconcert, to perturb.
gaze
gaze
noun
(archaic) The object gazed on.
(psychoanalysis) In Lacanian psychoanalysis, the relationship of the subject with the desire to look and awareness that one can be viewed.
A fixed look; a look of eagerness, wonder, or admiration; a continued look of attention.
verb
(intransitive) To stare intently or earnestly.
(transitive, poetic) To stare at.
haze
haze
noun
(countable, brewing) Any substance causing turbidity in beer or wine.
(figuratively) Any state suggestive of haze in the atmosphere, such as mental confusion or vagueness of memory.
(uncountable, engineering, packaging) The degree of cloudiness or turbidity in a clear glass or plastic, measured in percent.
A reduction of transparency of a clear gas or liquid.
An analogous dullness on a surface that is ideally highly reflective or transparent.
Very fine solid particles (smoke, dust) or liquid droplets (moisture) suspended in the air, slightly limiting visibility. (Compare fog, mist.)
verb
(US, informal) To perform an unpleasant initiation ritual upon a usually non-consenting individual, especially freshmen to a closed community such as a college fraternity or military unit.
(transitive) In a rodeo, to assist the bulldogger by keeping (the steer) running in a straight line.
(transitive) To use aversive stimuli on (a wild animal, such as a bear) to encourage it to keep its distance from humans.
To be or become hazy, or thick with haze.
To oppress or harass by forcing to do hard and unnecessary work.
jeaz
laze
laze
noun
(countable) An instance of lazing.
(uncountable) Laziness.
Acidic steam created when super-hot lava contacts salt water.
verb
To be lazy, waste time.
To pass time relaxing; to relax, lounge.
maze
maze
noun
(archaic) Confusion of thought; state of bewilderment.
A labyrinth; a puzzle consisting of a complicated network of paths or passages, the aim of which is to find one's way through.
Something made up of many confused or conflicting elements; a tangle.
verb
(transitive, archaic) To amaze, astonish, bewilder.
(transitive, archaic) To daze or stupefy.
naze
naze
noun
A cape at the southern tip of Norway (also known as The Lindesnes)
A promontory or headland.
raze
raze
noun
A swinging fence in a watercourse to prevent cattle passing through.
Obsolete spelling of race (rhizome of ginger).
verb
(transitive) To demolish; to level to the ground.
(transitive) To destroy; to strike out of existence; to obliterate.
(transitive) To scrape as if with a razor.
zane
zare
zeal
zeal
noun
(obsolete) A person who exhibits such fervour or tireless devotion.
The collective noun for a group of zebras.
The fervour or tireless devotion for a person, cause, or ideal and determination in its furtherance; diligent enthusiasm; powerful interest.
zeba
zela
zena
zeta
zeta
noun
(mathematics) A mathematical function formally known as the Riemann zeta function.
The sixth letter of the modern Greek alphabet (Ζ (Z), ζ (z)) preceded by epsilon (Ε (E), ε (e)) and followed by eta, (Η (I), η (i)); or the seventh letter in the ancient Greek alphabet, in which it is preceded by digamma (Ϝ (W), ϝ (w))