Having resemblance or similitude; similar; without difference.
adv
In the same manner, form, or degree; in common; equally.
alkes
alkin
alkin
adj
(obsolete except Midlands, Northern England, Scotland) Of all or every kind; all kinds or sorts of; intermingled and various.
alkol
alkyd
alkyd
noun
A synthetic resin derived from a reaction between alcohol and certain acids, used as a base for many laminates, paints and coatings.
alkyl
alkyl
noun
(organic chemistry) Any of a series of univalent radicals of the general formula CₙH₂ₙ₊₁ derived from aliphatic hydrocarbons.
aloke
ankle
ankle
noun
The skeletal joint which connects the foot with the leg; the uppermost portion of the foot and lowermost portion of the leg, which contain this skeletal joint.
verb
(US, slang) To walk.
(cycling) To cyclically angle the foot at the ankle while pedaling, to maximize the amount of work applied to the pedal during each revolution.
awkly
awkly
adv
(obsolete) Awkwardly.
(obsolete) In an unlucky or perverse manner.
bakal
bakli
balak
balkh
balkh
Proper noun
An ancient city and centre of Buddhism, Islam, and Zoroastrianism and capital of Bactria.
One of the 34 provinces in Afghanistan, Balkh Province.
balko
balks
balks
noun
plural of balk
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of balk
balky
balky
adj
Refusing to proceed or cooperate.
baulk
baulk
noun
(British spelling) Alternative spelling of balk
belak
bikol
bilek
bilks
bilks
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bilk
black
black
adj
(Ireland, informal) Overcrowded.
(Ireland, now derogatory) Protestant, often with the implication of being militantly pro-British or anti-Catholic. (Compare blackmouth ("Presbyterian").)
(US) Belonging to or descended from any of various sub-Saharan African ethnic groups which typically have dark pigmentation of the skin.
(board games, chess) Of or relating to the playing pieces of a board game deemed to belong to the "black" set (in chess the set used by the player who moves second) (often regardless of the pieces' actual colour).
(card games, of a card) Of the spades or clubs suits. Compare red (“of the hearts or diamonds suit”)
(chiefly historical) Designated for use by those ethnic groups (as described above).
(of a place, etc) Without light.
(of an object) Absorbing all light and reflecting none; dark and hueless.
(of coffee or tea) Without any cream, milk, or creamer.
(of objects, markets, etc) Illegitimate, illegal or disgraced.
(politics) Anarchist; of or pertaining to anarchism.
(politics) Related to the Christian Democratic Union of Germany.
(sometimes capitalized) Belonging to or descended from any of various (African, Aboriginal, etc) ethnic groups which typically have dark pigmentation of the skin. (See usage notes below.)
(typography) Said of a symbol or character that is solid, filled with color. Compare white (“said of a character or symbol outline, not filled with color”).
Bad; evil; ill-omened.
Clandestine; relating to a political, military, or espionage operation or site, the existence or details of which is withheld from the general public.
Expressing menace, or discontent; threatening; sullen.
Foul; dirty, soiled.
Having one or more features (hair, fur, armour, clothes, bark, etc) that is dark (or black); in taxonomy, especially: dark in comparison to another species with the same base name.
Occult; relating to something (such as mystical or magical knowledge) which is unknown to or kept secret from the general public.
noun
(Britain, countable) A type of firecracker that is really more dark brown in colour.
(US, slang) Marijuana.
(baseball, countable) The edge of home plate.
(billiards, snooker, pool, countable) The black ball.
(countable and uncountable) A black dye or pigment.
(countable and uncountable) The colour/color perceived in the absence of light, but also when no light is reflected, but rather absorbed.
(countable) A pen, pencil, crayon, etc., made of black pigment.
(countable) Something, or a part of a thing, which is black.
(in chess and similar games, countable) The person playing with the black set of pieces.
(in the plural) Black cloth hung up at funerals.
(informal) Blackness, the condition of belonging to or being descended from one of these ethnic groups.
(informal, countable) Blackcurrant syrup (in mixed drinks, e.g. snakebite and black, cider and black).
(obsolete, countable) A stain; a spot.
(sometimes capitalised, countable, often offensive) A member of descendant of any of various (African, Aboriginal, etc) ethnic groups which typically have dark pigmentation of the skin. (See usage notes.)
A dark smut fungus, harmful to wheat.
verb
(Britain, transitive) To boycott, usually as part of an industrial dispute.
(transitive) To apply blacking to (something).
(transitive) To make black; to blacken.
blake
blake
adj
Bleak, cold; bare, naked.
Pale, pallid; wan; sallow; of a sickly hue.
Yellow, as butter or cheese.
blank
blank
adj
(archaic) White or pale; without colour.
(figurative) Lacking characteristics which give variety; uniform.
(military) Of ammunition: having propellant but no bullets; unbulleted.
Absolute; downright; sheer.
Devoid of thoughts, memory, or inspiration.
Empty; void; without result; fruitless.
Free from writing, printing, or marks; having an empty space to be filled in
Utterly confounded or discomfited.
Without expression, usually due to incomprehension.
noun
(archaic, historical, obsolete) A small French coin, originally of silver, afterwards of copper, worth 5 deniers; also a silver coin of Henry V current in the parts of France then held by the English, worth about 8 pence .
(chemistry) A sample for a control experiment that does not contain any of the analyte of interest, in order to deliberately produce a non-detection to verify that a detection is distinguishable from it.
(dominoes) A domino without points on one or both of its divisions.
(electric recording) The shaved wax ready for placing on a recording machine for making wax records with a stylus [20th century].
(figurative) A vacant space, place, or period; a void [since the 17th century].
(firearms) Short for blank cartridge. [since the 19th century].
(literature) Blank verse .
(now chiefly US) A document, paper, or form with spaces left blank to be filled up at the pleasure of the person to whom it is given (e.g. a blank charter, ballot, form, contract, etc.), or as the event may determine; a blank form .
(obsolete) A nonplus [16th century].
(slang) Infertile semen.
A dash written in place of an omitted letter or word [since the 18th century]
A lot by which nothing is gained; a ticket in a lottery on which no prize is indicated [since the 16th century].
A space to be filled in on a form or template.
An empty form without substance; anything insignificant; nothing at all .
An empty space in one's memory; a forgotten item or memory [since the 18th century].
An unprinted leaf of a book [20th century].
Any article of glass on which subsequent processing is required [since the 19th century].
Provisional words printed in italics (instead of blank spaces) in a bill before Parliament, being matters of practical detail, of which the final form will be settled in Committee .
The space character; the character resulting from pressing the space-bar on a keyboard.
The white spot in the centre of a target; hence (figuratively) the object to which anything is directed or aimed, the range of such aim .
The ¹ / ₂₃₀₄₀₀ of a grain [17th century].
verb
(intransitive) To be temporarily unable to remember.
(intransitive) To become blank.
(transitive) To make void; to erase.
(transitive) To prevent from scoring; for example, in a sporting event.
(transitive, aviation, of a control surface) To render ineffective by blanketing with turbulent airflow, such as from aircraft wake or reverse thrust.
(transitive, slang) To ignore (a person) deliberately.
A small European river fish (Alburnus alburnus), of the family Cyprinidae.
bleck
bleck
intj
(rare) Alternative form of blech
noun
(dialectal) Coalfish (Pollachius virens).
(obsolete) A black man.
Any black fluid substance, as in blacking for leather, or black grease.
Soot, smut.
verb
(obsolete, dialect) To blacken.
(obsolete, dialect) To defile.
blenk
blenk
verb
(obsolete) To blink.
(obsolete) To look.
blick
blick
noun
A sawed-off length of something.
The brightening or iridescence appearing on silver or gold at the end of the cupelling or refinishing process.
verb
(intransitive) Of gold or silver: To exhibit blick.
(nonce word, transitive, intransitive) To make, or cause to make, a soft, crisp sound.
(transitive) To shine, gleam.
blink
blink
noun
(UK, dialect) gleam; glimmer; sparkle
(computing) A text formatting feature that causes text to disappear and reappear as a form of visual emphasis.
(figuratively) The time needed to close and reopen one's eyes.
(nautical) The dazzling whiteness about the horizon caused by the reflection of light from fields of ice at sea; iceblink
(sports, in the plural) Boughs cast where deer are to pass, in order to turn or check them.
(video games) An ability that allows teleporting, mostly for short distances
A glimpse or glance.
The act of quickly closing both eyes and opening them again.
verb
(Tyneside, obsolete) To glance.
(hyperbolic) To perform the smallest action that could solicit a response.
(intransitive) To close and reopen both eyes quickly.
(science fiction, video games) To teleport, mostly for short distances.
(transitive) To close and reopen one's eyes to remove (something) from on or around the eyes.
(transitive) To shut out of sight; to evade; to shirk.
To flash headlights on a car at.
To flash on and off at regular intervals.
To see with the eyes half shut, or indistinctly and with frequent winking, as a person with weak eyes.
To send a signal with a lighting device.
To shine, especially with intermittent light; to twinkle; to flicker; to glimmer, as a lamp.
To turn slightly sour, or blinky, as beer, milk, etc.
To wink; to twinkle with, or as with, the eye.
block
block
noun
(UK) Solitary confinement.
(chemistry) A portion of a macromolecule, comprising many units, that has at least one feature not present in adjacent portions.
(computing) A contiguous range of Unicode code points used to encode characters of a specific type; can be of any size evenly divisible by 16, up to 65,536 (a full plane).
(computing) A logical data storage unit containing one or more physical sectors (see cluster).
(cricket) A blockhole.
(cricket) A shot played by holding the bat vertically in the path of the ball, so that it loses momentum and drops to the ground.
(cricket) The popping crease.
(cricket) The position of a player or bat when guarding the wicket.
(cryptography) A fixed-length group of bits making up part of a message.
(falconry) The perch on which a bird of prey is kept.
(obsolete) A blockhead; a stupid fellow; a dolt.
(philately) A joined group of four (or in some cases nine) postage stamps, forming a roughly square shape.
(printing, dated) A piece of hard wood on which a stereotype or electrotype plate is mounted.
(programming) A region of code in a program that acts as a single unit, such as a function or loop.
(rail transport) A section of a railroad where the block system is used.
(slang) The human head.
(sports) An action to interfere with the movement of an opposing player or of the object of play (ball, puck).
(viticulture) A discrete group of vines in a vineyard, often distinguished from others by variety, clone, canopy training method, irrigation infrastructure, or some combination thereof.
(volleyball) A defensive play by one or more players meant to deflect a spiked ball back to the hitter’s court.
A case or frame housing one or more sheaves (pulleys), used with ropes to increase or redirect force, for example as part of lifting gear or a sailing ship's rigging. See also block and tackle.
A cellblock.
A chopping block: a cuboid base for cutting or beheading.
A contiguous group of urban lots of property, typically several acres in extent, not crossed by public streets.
A logical extent or region; a grouping or apportionment of like things treated together as a unit.
A mould on which hats, bonnets, etc., are shaped.
A physical area or extent of something, often rectangular or approximately rectangular.
A roughly cuboid building.
A section of split logs used as fuel.
A set of sheets (of paper) joined together at one end, forming a cuboid shape.
A substantial, often approximately cuboid, piece of any substance.
A temporary or permanent ban that prevents access to an online account or service, or connection to or from a designated telephone number, IP address, or similar.
A wig block: a simplified head model upon which wigs are worn.
Interference or obstruction of cognitive processes.
Misspelling of bloc.
Something that prevents something from passing.
The distance from one street to another in a city or suburb that is built (approximately) to a grid pattern.
verb
(intransitive, cricket) To play a block shot.
(programming, intransitive) To wait for some condition to become true.
(transitive) To bar (a message or communication), or bar connection with (an online account or service, a designated telephone number, IP address, etc.).
(transitive) To bar (someone undesirable) from connecting via telephone, instant messaging, etc., or from accessing an online account or service, or similar.
(transitive) To fill or obstruct (something) so that it is not possible to pass.
(transitive) To prevent (something from happening or someone from doing something).
(transitive) To prevent (something or someone) from passing.
(transitive) To shape or sketch out roughly.
(transitive) To stretch or mould (a knitted item, a hat, etc.) into the desired shape.
(transitive, cricket) To hit with a block.
(transitive, slang, obsolete) To knock (a person's hat) down over their eyes.
(transitive, sports) To impede (an opponent or opponent's play).
(transitive, theater) To specify the positions and movements of the actors for (a section of a play or film).
bloke
bloke
noun
(Australia, Britain, New Zealand, Ireland, informal) A man who behaves in a particularly laddish or overtly heterosexual manner.
(Australia, New Zealand, UK, Ireland) An exemplar of a certain masculine, independent male archetype.
(Britain, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, informal) A fellow, a man; especially an ordinary man, a man on the street.
(Britain, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, naval slang) (A lower deck term for) the captain or executive officer of a warship, especially one regarded as tough on discipline and punishment.
(chiefly Quebec, colloquial) An anglophone (English-speaking) man.
blunk
blunk
verb
(dialect, colloquial, informal) simple past tense of blink
(intransitive) To blench, blink; turn aside.
(transitive, Scotland) To spoil, mismanage.
bulak
bulak
noun
An Indian nose ring usually worn by married women.
bulks
bulks
noun
plural of bulk
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bulk
bulky
bulky
adj
(bodybuilding) Having excess body mass, especially muscle.
Being large in size, mass, or volume.
Unwieldy.
calks
calks
noun
plural of calk
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of calk
caulk
caulk
noun
A composition of vehicle and pigment used at ambient temperatures for filling/sealing joints or junctures, that remains elastic for an extended period of time after application.
Alternative form of calk (“pointed projection on a horseshoe”)
Caulking.
verb
(nautical) To drive oakum into the seams of a ship's wooden deck or hull to make it watertight.
(slang) To copulate.
To apply caulking to joints, cracks, or a juncture of different materials.
celik
celka
chalk
chalk
noun
(US, military, countable) A platoon-sized group of airborne soldiers.
(US, sports, chiefly basketball) The prediction that there will be no upsets, and the favored competitor will win.
(US, sports, chiefly basketball, horseracing) The favorite in a sporting event.
(countable) A piece of chalk, or nowadays processed compressed gypsum (calcium sulfate, CaSO4), that is used for drawing and for writing on a blackboard (chalkboard).
(uncountable) A soft, white, powdery limestone (calcium carbonate, CaCO3).
(uncountable, climbing, gymnastics) A white powdery substance used to prevent hands slipping from holds when climbing, or losing grip in weight-lifting or gymnastics, sometimes but not always limestone-chalk, often magnesium carbonate (MgCO3).
Tailor's chalk.
verb
(figuratively) To record a score or event, as if on a chalkboard.
To apply chalk to anything, such as the tip of a billiard cue.
To make white, as if with chalk; to make pale; to bleach.
To manure (land) with chalk.
To record something, as on a blackboard, using chalk.
To use powdered chalk to mark the lines on a playing field.
cilka
clack
clack
noun
(colloquial) The tongue.
An abrupt, sharp sound, especially one made by two hard objects colliding repetitively; a sound midway between a click and a clunk.
Anything that causes a clacking noise, such as the clapper of a mill, or a clack valve.
Chatter; prattle.
verb
(UK) To cut the sheep's mark off (wool), to make the wool weigh less and thus yield less duty.
(intransitive) To make a sudden, sharp noise, or succession of noises; to click.
(transitive) To cause to make a sudden, sharp noise, or succession of noises; to click.
Dated form of cluck.
To chatter or babble; to utter rapidly without consideration.
claik
claik
noun
(Scotland) Gossip; a gossip.
(Scotland) The cry of a goose, or other bird.
verb
(Scotland) To honk or cry like a goose.
clake
clake
noun
Alternative form of claik (the barnacle goose)
clank
clank
noun
A loud, hard sound of metal hitting metal.
verb
(intransitive) To make a clanking sound
(transitive) To cause to sound with a clank.
clark
clark
Proper noun
definition (see
definition
a city in South Dakota, USA, and county seat of Clark County.
clawk
cleck
cleck
verb
(chiefly Scotland, transitive) To hatch (a bird); (colloquial) to give birth to (a person).
cleek
cleek
noun
(chiefly Scotland) A large hook.
(golf, dated) A metal-headed golf club with little loft, equivalent in a modern set of clubs to a one or two iron or a four wood.
verb
(golf, dated, transitive) To strike with the club called a cleek.
clerk
clerk
noun
(Quakerism) A facilitator of a Quaker meeting for business affairs.
(archaic) In the Church of England, the layman that assists in the church service, especially in reading the responses (also called parish clerk).
(dated) A cleric or clergyman (the legal title for clergy of the Church of England is "Clerk in Holy Orders", still used in legal documents and cherished by some of their number).
(obsolete) A scholar.
A law clerk.
A salesclerk; a person who serves customers in a store or market.
An employee at a hotel who deals with guests.
One who occupationally provides assistance by working with records, accounts, letters, etc.; an office worker.
verb
The law school graduate clerked for the supreme court judge for the summer.
To act as a clerk, to perform the duties or functions of a clerk
cleuk
click
click
intj
The sound of a click.
noun
(Britain) The act of making a clicking sound by pressing a finger against the thumb and then releasing to strike the palm; a snap.
(UK, dialect) The latch of a door.
(UK, slang, obsolete) A knock or blow.
(US) Misspelling of clique.
(by extension) A single instance of content on the Internet being accessed.
(graphical user interface) The act of pressing a button on a computer mouse or similar input device, both as a physical act and a reaction in the software.
(phonetics) An ingressive sound made by coarticulating a velar or uvular closure with another closure.
A brief, sharp, not particularly loud, relatively high-pitched sound produced by the impact of something small and hard against something hard, such as by the operation of a switch, a lock, or a latch.
A detent, pawl, or ratchet, such as that which catches the cogs of a ratchet wheel to prevent backward motion.
A pawl or similar catch.
Alternative spelling of klick
Sound made by a dolphin.
The act of operating a switch, etc., so that it clicks.
verb
(Britain) To snap the fingers.
(computing) To press and release (a button on a computer mouse).
(dated, intransitive) To tick.
(intransitive) To emit a click.
(intransitive) To get along well.
(intransitive) To make sense suddenly.
(intransitive, India) Of a film, to be successful at the box office.
(intransitive, India) To achieve success in one's career or a breakthrough, often the first time.
(intransitive, graphical user interface) To navigate by clicking a mouse button.
(obsolete) To snatch.
(transitive) To cause to make a click; to operate (a switch, etc) so that it makes a click.
(transitive, India) To take (a photograph) with a camera.
(transitive, computing, advertising) To visit (a web site).
(transitive, graphical user interface) To select a software item using, usually, but not always, the pressing of a mouse button.
clink
clink
noun
(onomatopoeia) The sound of metal on metal, or glass on glass.
(slang) A prison.
Stress cracks produced in metal ingots as they cool after being cast.
verb
(humorous, dated) To rhyme.
(transitive, Scotland) To clinch; to rivet.
(transitive, intransitive) To make a clinking sound; to make a sound of metal on metal or glass on glass; to strike materials such as metal or glass against one another.
cloak
cloak
noun
(Internet) A text replacement for an IRC user's hostname or IP address, making the user less identifiable.
(figurative) That which conceals; a disguise or pretext.
A blanket-like covering, often metaphorical.
A long outer garment worn over the shoulders covering the back; a cape, often with a hood.
verb
(science fiction, transitive, intransitive) To render or become invisible via futuristic technology.
(transitive) To cover as with a cloak.
(transitive, figurative) To cover up, hide or conceal.
clock
clock
noun
(Britain) The odometer of a motor vehicle.
(attributive) A common noun relating to an instrument that measures or keeps track of time.
(computing, informal) A CPU clock cycle, or T-state.
(electronics) An electrical signal that synchronizes timing among digital circuits of semiconductor chips or modules.
(uncountable) A luck-based patience or solitaire card game with the cards laid out to represent the face of a clock.
A large beetle, especially the European dung beetle (Geotrupes stercorarius).
A pattern near the heel of a sock or stocking.
A time clock.
An instrument that measures or keeps track of time; a non-wearable timepiece.
The seed head of a dandelion.
verb
(Britain, slang) To falsify the reading of the odometer of a vehicle.
(Scotland, intransitive, dated) To hatch.
(Scotland, intransitive, dated) To make the sound of a hen; to cluck.
(slang) To take notice of; to realise; to recognize someone or something.
(transgender slang) To identify someone as being transgender.
(transitive) To measure the duration of.
(transitive) To measure the speed of.
(transitive) To ornament (e.g. the side of a stocking) with figured work.
(transitive, Britain, New Zealand, slang) To beat a video game.
(transitive, slang) To hit (someone) heavily.
cloke
cloke
noun
Archaic spelling of cloak.
cloky
clonk
clonk
noun
(fishing) A stick-like tool used to strike the surface of the water and produce a sound that causes nearby fish to attack the bait.
The abrupt sound of two hard objects coming into contact.
cluck
cluck
noun
A kind of tongue click used to urge on a horse.
Any sound similar to this.
The sound made by a hen, especially when brooding, or calling her chicks.
verb
(Britain, drug slang) to suffer withdrawal from heroin.
(transitive) To cause (the tongue) to make a clicking sound.
To call together, or call to follow, as a hen does her chickens.
clunk
clunk
noun
(dated) The sound of liquid coming out of a bottle, etc.; a glucking sound.
A dull, metallic sound, especially one made by two bodies coming into contact.
verb
to make such a sound
dekle
dekle
noun
(art) Alternative form of deckle
dilks
eakly
eakly
Proper noun
A town in Oklahoma.
eckel
ehlke
elkin
eskil
flack
flack
noun
(Canada, US) A publicist, a publicity agent.
Alternative spelling of flak.
verb
(Canada, US) To publicise, to promote.
(intransitive, UK dialectal) To hang loosely; flag.
(intransitive, obsolete) To flutter; palpitate.
(transitive, UK dialectal) To beat by flapping.
flake
flake
noun
(Australia) The meat of the gummy shark.
(UK) Dogfish.
(UK, dialect) A paling; a hurdle.
(US, law enforcement, slang) A corrupt arrest, e.g. to extort money for release or merely to fulfil a quota.
(archaeology) A prehistoric tool chipped out of stone.
(informal) A person who is impractical, flighty, unreliable, or inconsistent; especially with maintaining a living.
(nautical) A small stage hung over a vessel's side, for workmen to stand on while calking, etc.
(nautical) Alternative form of fake (“turn or coil of cable or hawser”)
A carnation with only two colours in the flower, the petals having large stripes.
A flat turn or tier of rope.
A loose filmy mass or a thin chiplike layer of anything
A platform of hurdles, or small sticks made fast or interwoven, supported by stanchions, for drying codfish and other things.
A scale of a fish or similar animal
A wire rack for drying fish.
verb
(Ireland, slang) To hit (another person).
(US, law enforcement, slang) To plant evidence to facilitate a corrupt arrest.
(colloquial) To prove unreliable or impractical; to abandon or desert, to fail to follow through.
(technical) To store an item such as rope or sail in layers
To break or chip off in a flake.
To lay out on a flake for drying.
flaky
flaky
adj
(informal, of a person) Unreliable; likely to make plans with others but then abandon those plans.
(informal, of a thing) Unreliable; working only on an intermittent basis; likely due to malfunction.
Consisting of flakes or of small, loose masses; lying, or cleaving off, in flakes or layers; flakelike.
flank
flank
adj
(US, nautical, of speed) Maximum. Historically faster than full speed (the most a vessel can sustain without excessive engine wear or risk of damage), now frequently used interchangeably. Typically used in an emergency or during an attack.
noun
(anatomy) The flesh between the last rib and the hip; the side.
(cooking) A cut of meat from the flank of an animal.
(military) The extreme left or right edge of a military formation, army etc.
(military) The sides of a bastion perpendicular to the wall from which the bastion projects.
(soccer) The wing, one side of the pitch.
That part of the acting surface of a gear wheel tooth that lies within the pitch line.
The outermost strip of a road.
The side of something, in general senses.
verb
(intransitive) To be placed to the side(s) of something (usually in terms of two objects, one on each side).
(transitive) To attack the flank(s) of.
(transitive) To defend the flank(s) of.
(transitive) To place to the side(s) of.
flask
flask
noun
(engineering) A container for holding a casting mold, especially for sand casting molds.
(sciences) Laboratory glassware used to hold larger volumes than test tubes, normally having a narrow mouth of a standard size which widens to a flat or spherical base.
A bed in a gun carriage.
A container used to discreetly carry a small amount of a hard alcoholic beverage; a pocket flask.
A narrow-necked vessel of metal or glass, used for various purposes; as of sheet metal, to carry gunpowder in; or of wrought iron, to contain quicksilver; or of glass, to heat water in, etc.
verb
(dentistry) To invest a denture in a flask so as to produce a sectional mold.
fleak
fleak
noun
A small, light piece that is only loosely joined to something else, and which has a tendency to detach.
A thin piece that is chipped or peeled off from the surface of something else.
A thin piece that the flesh of some animals (such as fish) tends to break into.
verb
(transitive, intransitive, obsolete) Synonym of fleck
(transitive, obsolete, rare) Synonym of flake (“to remove (something) in fleaks or flakes (small chips or pieces)”)
fleck
fleck
noun
A flake.
A lock, as of wool.
A small spot or streak; a speckle.
verb
(transitive) To mark (something) with small spots.
flick
flick
noun
(dated, slang) A chap or fellow; sometimes as a friendly term of address.
(fencing) A cut that lands with the point, often involving a whip of the foible of the blade to strike at a concealed target.
(informal) A motion picture, movie, film; (in plural, usually preceded by "the") movie theater, cinema.
(tennis) A powerful underarm volley shot.
A flitch.
A short, quick movement, especially a brush, sweep, or flip.
A unit of time, equal to 1/705,600,000 of a second
The act of pressing a place on a touch screen device.
verb
To move or hit (something) with a short, quick motion.
To pass by rapidly, so as not to be perceived clearly.
flisk
flisk
noun
(Scotland) A caper; a spring; a whim.
A comb with large teeth.
verb
(Scotland, obsolete) To frisk; to skip; to caper.
flock
flock
noun
(Christianity) A religious congregation.
A large number of animals associated together in a group; commonly used of sheep, but (dated) also used for goats, farmed animals, and a wide variety of animals.
A large number of people.
A lock of wool or hair.
A number of birds together in a group, such as those gathered together for the purpose of migration.
Coarse tufts of wool or cotton used in bedding.
Those served by a particular pastor or shepherd.herd/flock
Very fine sifted woollen refuse, especially that from shearing the nap of cloths, formerly used as a coating for wallpaper to give it a velvety or clothlike appearance; also, the dust of vegetable fibre used for a similar purpose.
verb
(intransitive) To congregate in or head towards a place in large numbers.
(transitive) To coat a surface with dense fibers or particles; especially, to create a dense arrangement of fibers with a desired nap.
(transitive, obsolete) To flock to; to crowd.
To cover a Christmas tree with artificial snow.
To treat a pool with chemicals to remove suspended particles.
flook
flook
noun
A fluke of an anchor.
flowk
flowk
noun
Archaic form of fluke. (type of worm)
fluke
fluke
noun
(nautical) Any of the triangular blades at the end of an anchor, designed to catch the ground.
A flounder.
A lucky or improbable occurrence, with the implication that the occurrence could not be repeated.
A metal hook on the head of certain staff weapons (such as a bill), made in various forms depending on function, whether used for grappling or to penetrate armour when swung at an opponent.
A trematode; a parasitic flatworm of the Trematoda class, related to the tapeworm.
Either of the two lobes of a whale's or similar creature's tail.
In general, a winglike formation on a central piece.
Waste cotton.
verb
(snooker) To fortuitously pot a ball in an unintended way.
To obtain a successful outcome by pure chance.
fluky
fluky
adj
Alternative spelling of flukey
flunk
flunk
verb
(US, dated, informal) To shirk (a task or duty).
(US, transitive) Of a teacher, to deny a student a passing grade.
(US, transitive, intransitive) Of a student, to fail a class; to not pass.
To back out through fear. (Commonly in the phrase 'flunk it', the 'it' referring to a specific task avoided; sometimes without specific reference, describing a person's attitude to life in general.)
flusk
folks
folks
noun
(California) Late 19th and early 20th century migrants to California from Iowa and other parts of the Midwestern United States.
(US) People in general; everybody or anybody.
(US, slang, rare, southern Louisiana) The police.
The members of one's immediate family, especially one's parents
plural of folk
folky
folky
adj
(music, informal) Having the character of folk music
foulk
fulke
fulks
galik
glack
glaik
glaik
noun
(Tyneside, derogatory) A fool or eccentric person.
glaky
glaky
adj
(Tyneside) Alternative spelling of glaiky
gleek
gleek
noun
(countable) Three of the same cards held in one hand; three of a kind.
(informal) A stream of saliva from a person's mouth.
(slang) A geek who is involved in a glee club, choir, or singing.
(uncountable) A once-popular game of cards played by three people.
A jest or scoff; trick or deception.
An enticing glance or look.
verb
(informal) To discharge a long, thin stream of liquid (including saliva) through the teeth or from under the tongue, sometimes by pressing the tongue against the salivary glands.
(obsolete, intransitive) To jest.
(obsolete, intransitive) To pass time frivolously.
(obsolete, transitive) To ridicule, or mock; to make sport of.
The man said he “gleeked” on the woman, but did not intentionally spit on her.
glick
glike
glike
noun
(obsolete) A sneer; a flout.
glink
glisk
gluck
gluck
verb
(transitive, intransitive) To flow or cause to flow in a noisy series of spurts, as when liquid is emptied through the narrow neck of a bottle.
halke
hekla
holks
holks
noun
plural of holk
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of holk
hulks
hulks
noun
plural of hulk
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hulk
hulky
hulky
adj
Large; hulking.
ickle
ickle
adj
(childish, chiefly UK) Little.
noun
(dialectal) An icicle.
iloko
inkle
inkle
noun
Narrow linen tape, used for trimmings or to make shoelaces
verb
(transitive, rare) To have a hint or inkling of; divine.
(transitive, rare) To hint at; disclose.
islek
jelks
jokul
jokul
noun
A mountain covered with ice and snow, a snow mountain.
kabel
kabul
kaela
kahle
kaila
kaile
kails
kails
noun
plural of kail
kalam
kalam
noun
(Islam) speculative theology
kalan
kalan
noun
(archaic) The sea otter.
kalat
kaleb
kaleb
Proper noun
name, a rare modern spelling variant of Caleb.
kales
kales
noun
plural of kale
kalie
kalie
Proper noun
name, one of the modern spelling variants of Kaylee.
kalif
kalif
noun
A rank in the Ku Klux Klan
kalil
kalin
kalis
kalis
noun
A Filipino sword akin to the kris.
kalki
kalle
kalli
kally
kalon
kalon
noun
Ideal perfect beauty in the physical and moral sense, especially as perceived by Greek philosophers.
kalpa
kalpa
noun
(Hinduism, Buddhism) A period of 4.32 billion years (1000 chatur-yugas or cycles of the four yugas).
kalvn
kamal
kamal
noun
(historical) A navigation device, known to the Arabs and Chinese of the ancient world, consisting of a wooden card and knotted string.
kanal
kanal
noun
A unit of area used in parts of northern India and in Pakistan, equivalent to one eighth of an acre.