(obsolete) To impute (something) as a fault to or upon someone.
arst
arta
arte
arts
arts
noun
The liberal arts.
The study of languages and literature.
The study of literature, philosophy, and the arts.
plural of art.
arty
arty
adj
(sometimes derogatory) Pretending to artistic worth; high-flown.
Inclined towards the arts.
noun
(military, slang) An artillery crew member.
(military, slang) Artillery.
astr
atar
atar
noun
Alternative spelling of attar
atrs
atry
bart
bert
birt
birt
noun
(UK, dialect, archaic) A fish of the turbot kind; the brill.
bort
bort
noun
Poor-quality diamond, used for industrial cutting or abrasion; a poorly crystallized diamond.
brat
brat
noun
(derogatory, slang) A child who is regarded as mischievous, unruly, spoiled, or selfish.
(historical) A rough cloak or ragged garment.
(informal) Bratwurst.
(military) Acronym of Born, Raised, And Transferred.
(mining) A thin bed of coal mixed with pyrites or carbonate of lime.
(obsolete) The young of an animal.
(obsolete, UK, Scotland, dialect) A coarse kind of apron for keeping the clothes clean; a bib.
(slang) A child (at any age) of an active military service member.
(slang) A human child.
A turbot or flatfish.
verb
(BDSM, intransitive) To act in a bratty manner (as the submissive).
bret
brit
brit
noun
One of the tiny crustaceans, of the genus Calanus, that are part of the diet of right whales.
One of the young of herrings, sprats, etc.
brit milah
verb
(intransitive) To fall out or shatter (as overripe hops or grain).
(intransitive, dialectal) To fade away; alter.
(transitive) To break in pieces; divide.
(transitive) To bruise; indent.
brot
brut
brut
adj
(of champagne) very dry, and not sweet
bsrt
btry
burt
cart
cart
noun
(Internet) A shopping cart.
(computing, video games, informal) A cartridge for a computer or video game system.
(radio, informal) A tape cartridge used for pre-recorded material such as jingles and advertisements.
A small motor vehicle resembling a car; a go-cart.
A small, open, wheeled vehicle, drawn or pushed by a person or animal, more often used for transporting goods than passengers.
verb
(transitive) To carry or convey in a cart.
(transitive) To remove, especially involuntarily or for disposal.
(transitive, informal) To carry goods.
(transitive, obsolete) To expose in a cart by way of punishment.
cert
cert
adj
Alternative form of cert.
noun
(informal) A certainty; something guaranteed to happen.
(informal) Certificate.
cort
crit
crit
noun
(cycling) A criterium race.
(informal) A proponent of critical legal studies.
(informal) Criticism.
(informal) Critique.
(medicine, colloquial) Haematocrit.
(slang, role-playing games) A critical hit.
verb
(transitive, slang, role-playing games) To land a critical hit on.
crtc
crts
crut
crut
noun
(UK, dialect) A dwarf.
(mining) A cross-measure tunnel or drift.
The rough, shaggy part of oak bark.
ctrl
ctrl
noun
Alternative form of ctrl. Abbreviation of control.
curt
curt
adj
Brief or terse, especially to the point of being rude.
Short or concise.
verb
(obsolete, rare) To cut, cut short, shorten.
dart
dart
noun
(Australia, Canada, colloquial) A cigarette.
(Australia, obsolete) A plan or scheme.
(military) A dart-shaped target towed behind an aircraft to train shooters.
(sewing) A fold that is stitched on a garment.
(sometimes figurative) Anything resembling such a missile; something that pierces or wounds like such a weapon.
A fish, the dace.
A pointed missile weapon, intended to be thrown by the hand; for example, a short lance or javelin.
A small object with a pointed tip at one end and feathers at the other, which is thrown at a target in the game of darts.
A sudden or fast movement.
Any of various species of hesperiid butterfly.
Any sharp-pointed missile weapon, such as an arrow.
verb
(intransitive) To fly or pass swiftly, like a dart; to move rapidly in one direction; to shoot out quickly.
(intransitive) To start and run with speed; to shoot rapidly along.
(transitive) To send forth suddenly or rapidly; to emit; to shoot.
(transitive) To shoot with a dart, especially a tranquilizer dart.
(transitive) To throw with a sudden effort or thrust; to hurl or launch.
dirt
dirt
noun
(chiefly US) Soil or earth.
(figurative) Meanness; sordidness.
(mining) In placer mining, earth, gravel, etc., before washing.
A stain or spot (on clothes etc); any foreign substance that worsens appearance.
Previously unknown facts, or the invented "facts", about a person.
freckles
verb
(transitive, rare) To make foul or filthy; soil; befoul; dirty
dort
dort
noun
(UK dialectal, Northern England, Scotland) A sulky or sullen mood; the sulks.
verb
(intransitive) To become pettish; sulk.
drat
drat
intj
Expressing anger, annoyance or frustration.
verb
(transitive) To damn or curse.
entr
erat
erst
erst
adj
(obsolete) First.
adv
(archaic, poetic) Formerly, once, erstwhile.
(obsolete) First of all, before (some other specified thing).
(obsolete) Sooner (than); before.
erth
etra
fart
fart
noun
(colloquial, impolite, derogatory) An irritating person; a fool.
(colloquial, impolite, derogatory, potentially offensive) (usually as "old fart") An elderly person; especially one perceived to hold old-fashioned views.
(informal) An emission of digestive gases from the anus; a flatus.
verb
(colloquial, intransitive, usually as "fart around") To waste time with idle and inconsequential tasks; to go about one's activities in a lackadaisical manner; to be lazy or over-relaxed in one's manner or bearing.
(figuratively, transitive) To emit (fumes, gases, etc.).
(informal, impolite, intransitive) To emit digestive gases from the anus; to flatulate.
fort
fort
noun
(historical) An outlying trading-station, as in British North America.
A fortified defensive structure stationed with troops.
A structure improvised from furniture, bedding, etc., for playing games.
Any permanent army post.
verb
To create a fort, fortifications, a strong point, or a redoubt.
frat
frat
noun
Shortened form of fraternity, college organization. (Often used as a noun modifier.)
fret
fret
noun
(Northumbria) A fog or mist at sea, or coming inland from the sea.
(heraldry) A saltire interlaced with a mascle.
(mining, in the plural) The worn sides of riverbanks, where ores or stones containing them accumulate after being washed down from higher ground, which thus indicate to miners the locality of veins of ore.
(music) One of the pieces of metal, plastic or wood across the neck of a guitar or other string instrument that marks where a finger should be positioned to depress a string as it is played.
(obsolete or dialectal) A ferrule, a ring.
(rare) A channel or passage created by the sea.
A channel, a strait; a fretum.
Agitation of the mind marked by complaint and impatience; disturbance of temper; irritation.
Agitation of the surface of a fluid by fermentation or some other cause; a rippling on the surface of water.
An ornamental pattern consisting of repeated vertical and horizontal lines, often in relief.
Herpes; tetter (“any of various pustular skin conditions”).
verb
(intransitive) To be agitated; to rankle; to be in violent commotion.
(intransitive) To be anxious, to worry.
(intransitive) To be worn away; to chafe; to fray.
(intransitive, brewing, oenology) To have secondary fermentation (fermentation occurring after the conversion of sugar to alcohol in beers and wine) take place.
(transitive) In the form fret out: to squander, to waste.
(transitive) To chafe or irritate; to worry.
(transitive) To cut through with a fretsaw, to create fretwork.
(transitive) To decorate or ornament, especially with an interlaced or interwoven pattern, or (architecture) with carving or relief (raised) work.
(transitive) To form a pattern on; to variegate.
(transitive) To make rough, to agitate or disturb; to cause to ripple.
(transitive, intransitive) To be chafed or irritated; to be angry or vexed; to utter peevish expressions through irritation or worry.
(transitive, intransitive) To gnaw; to consume, to eat away.
(transitive, obsolete or poetic) Especially when describing animals: to consume, devour, or eat.
To bind, to tie, originally with a loop or ring.
To fit frets on to (a musical instrument).
To press down the string behind a fret.
frit
frit
adj
(UK, regional) Frightened.
noun
(archaeology) A similar material used in the manufacture of ceramic beads and small ornaments. (eastern Mediterranean; Bronze and Iron Age)
A frit fly.
A fused mixture of materials used to make glass.
verb
To add frit to a glass or ceramic mixture
To prepare by heat (the materials for making glass); to fuse partially.
frot
frot
noun
A sexual act in which two males rub each other's penises with their penis.
verb
(archaic) To rub, chafe.
(slang) To rub one's genitals – usually the penis – against another person for sexual gratification.
(tanning) To work leather by rubbing.
frst
gart
gart
verb
simple past tense and past participle of gar
gert
gert
adj
(slang, West Country, Somerset, Bristol) big
adv
(slang, West Country, Somerset, Bristol) very
girt
girt
adj
(UK, rural dialect) Alternative spelling of gurt in the sense 'great'.
(nautical) Bound by a cable; used of a vessel so moored by two anchors that she swings against one of the cables by force of the current or tide.
noun
A horizontal structural member of post and beam architecture, typically attached to bridge two or more vertical members such as corner posts.
verb
(nautical) to capsize because of forces in the cable attaching it to another vessel.
To bind horizontally, as with a belt or girdle.
To gird.
To measure the girth of.
simple past tense and past participle of gird
gmrt
grat
grat
noun
(slang) A gratuity or tip.
gret
grit
grit
noun
(geology) A hard, coarse-grained siliceous sandstone; gritstone. Also, a finer sharp-grained sandstone, e.g., grindstone grit.
(usually in the plural) Coarsely ground corn or hominy used as porridge.
(usually in the plural) Husked but unground oats.
A collection of hard small materials, such as dirt, ground stone, debris from sandblasting or other such grinding, or swarf from metalworking.
A measure of the relative coarseness of an abrasive material such as sandpaper, the smaller the number the coarser the abrasive.
Inedible particles in food.
Sand or a sand–salt mixture spread on wet and, especially, icy roads and footpaths to improve traction.
Strength of mind; great courage or fearlessness; fortitude.
verb
(obsolete, intransitive) To give forth a grating sound, like sand under the feet; to grate; to grind.
Apparently only in grit one's teeth: to clench, particularly in reaction to pain or anger.
To cover with grit.
grot
grot
noun
(poetic) A grotto.
(slang, countable) A miserable person.
(slang, uncountable) Any unpleasant substance or material.
gurt
gurt
adj
(UK dialect, West Country) Pronunciation spelling of great.
noun
(mining) A gutter or channel for water, hewn out of the bottom of a working drift.
hart
hart
noun
A male deer, especially the male of the red deer after his fifth year.
A male red deer or one of related species.
Obsolete spelling of heart
hert
hort
hurt
hurt
adj
Pained.
Wounded, physically injured.
noun
(archaic) A bodily injury causing pain; a wound or bruise.
(archaic) Injury; damage; detriment; harm
(engineering) A band on a trip-hammer helve, bearing the trunnions.
(heraldry) A roundel azure (blue circular spot).
A husk.
An emotional or psychological humiliation or bad experience.
verb
(intransitive) To be painful.
(transitive, intransitive) To cause (a person or animal) physical pain and/or injury.
(transitive, intransitive) To cause (somebody) emotional pain.
(transitive, intransitive) To damage, harm, impair, undermine, impede.
intr
intr
adj
(grammar) Abbreviation of intransitive.
irtf
iter
iter
noun
(anatomy) A passage, especially the passage between the third and fourth ventricles in the brain; the cerebral aqueduct.
jert
kart
kart
noun
A go-cart.
verb
(intransitive) To ride in a go-cart.
kirt
kort
krti
kurt
ltvr
mart
mart
noun
(by extension, the animal or its meat) Salt beef.
(historical) Marque (chiefly used in the phrase letters of mart).
(obsolete) A bargain.
(obsolete) Battle; contest.
A bazaar, fair, marketplace.
A head of feeder cattle or fattened cattle (usually the latter).
A shop, store.
verb
(obsolete) To buy or sell in, or as in a mart.
(obsolete) To traffic.
mert
mort
mort
noun
(Internet, informal) A player in a multi-user dungeon who does not have special administrator privileges and whose character can be killed.
(UK, Scotland, dialect) The skin of a sheep or lamb that has died of disease.
(card games) A variety of dummy whist for three players.
(card games) The exposed or dummy hand of cards in the game of mort.
(obsolete, UK, thieves' cant) A woman; a female.
A great quantity or number.
A note sounded on a horn at the death of a deer.
A three-year-old salmon.
Death; especially, the death of game in hunting.
mrts
mttr
myrt
natr
nert
orit
orth
orts
orts
noun
plural of ort
otdr
outr
part
part
adj
Fractional; partial.
adv
Partly; partially; fractionally.
noun
(Judaism) In the Hebrew lunisolar calendar, a unit of time equivalent to 3⅓ seconds.
(US) A room in a public building, especially a courtroom.
(US) The dividing line formed by combing the hair in different directions.
(mathematics, dated) A factor.
(music) The melody played or sung by a particular instrument, voice, or group of instruments or voices, within a polyphonic piece.
3.5 centiliters of one ingredient in a mixed drink.
A constituent of character or capacity; quality; faculty; talent; usually in the plural with a collective sense.
A distinct element of something larger.
A fraction of a whole.
A group inside a larger group.
A section of a document.
A section of land; an area of a country or other territory; region.
A unit of relative proportion in a mixture.
Duty; responsibility.
Each of two contrasting sides of an argument, debate etc.; "hand".
Position or role (especially in a play).
Share, especially of a profit.
verb
(intransitive) To be divided in two or separated; shed.
(intransitive) To leave the company of.
(obsolete) To have a part or share; to partake.
(obsolete) To hold apart; to stand or intervene between.
(transitive) To divide in two.
(transitive, Internet) To leave (an IRC channel).
(transitive, archaic) To leave; to quit.
(transitive, now rare) To divide up; to share.
To cut hair with a parting; shed.
To separate by a process of extraction, elimination, or secretion.
To separate or disunite; to remove from contact or contiguity; to sunder.
pert
pert
adj
(archaic) Especially of children or social inferiors: cheeky, impertinent.
(obsolete) Clever.
(obsolete) Open; evident; unhidden.
(of a part of the body) Well-formed; shapely.
(of a person) Attractive.
Lively; alert and cheerful; bright.
noun
(obsolete) An impudent person.
verb
(intransitive, obsolete) To behave with pertness; to misbehave.
petr
port
port
adj
(nautical) Of or relating to port, the left-hand side of a vessel when facing the bow.
noun
(Australia) A suitcase or schoolbag.
(archaic) The manner in which a person carries himself; bearing; deportment; carriage. See also portance.
(computing) A female connector of an electronic device, into which a cable's male connector can be inserted.
(computing) A logical or physical construct in and from which data are transferred. Computer port (hardware) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
(computing) A program that has been adapted, modified, or recoded so that it works on a different platform from the one for which it was created; the act of this adapting.
(computing, BSD) A set of files used to build and install a binary executable file from the source code of an application.
(curling, bowls) A space between two stones wide enough for a delivered stone or bowl to pass through.
(informal) The portfolio of a model or artist.
(medicine) A small medical appliance installed beneath the skin, connected to a vein by a catheter, and used to inject drugs or to draw blood samples.
(military) The position of a weapon when ported; a rifle position executed by throwing the weapon diagonally across the front of the body, with the right hand grasping the small of the stock and the barrel sloping upward and crossing the point of the left shoulder.
(nautical, aviation, uncountable) The left-hand side of a vessel, including aircraft, when one is facing the front. Used to unambiguously refer to directions relative to the vessel structure, rather than to a person or object on board.
(now Scotland, historical) An entryway or gate.
(rowing) A sweep rower that primarily rows with an oar on the port side.
A place on the coast at which ships can shelter, or dock to load and unload cargo or passengers.
A town or city containing such a place, a port city.
A type of very sweet fortified wine, mostly dark red, traditionally made in Portugal.
An opening or doorway in the side of a ship, especially for boarding or loading; an embrasure through which a cannon may be discharged; a porthole.
An opening where a connection (such as a pipe) is made.
Something used to carry a thing, especially a frame for wicks in candle-making.
verb
(US, government and law) To transfer a voucher or subsidy from one jurisdiction to another.
(computing, video games) To adapt, modify, or create a new version of, a program so that it works on a different platform. Porting (computing) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
(military) To hold or carry (a weapon) with both hands so that it lays diagonally across the front of the body, with the barrel or similar part near the left shoulder and the right hand grasping the small of the stock; or, to throw (the weapon) into this position on command.
(nautical, transitive, chiefly imperative) To turn or put to the left or larboard side of a ship; said of the helm.
(telephony, transitive) To carry or transfer (an existing telephone number) from one telephone service provider to another.
To carry, bear, or transport. See porter.
prat
prat
adj
(obsolete) Cunning, astute.
noun
(UK, slang) A fool.
(now Scotland) A cunning or mischievous trick; a prank, a joke.
(slang) A buttock, or the buttocks; a person's bottom.
(slang) The female genitals.
pret
prot
prtc
prut
raft
raft
noun
(US) A collection of logs, fallen trees, etc. which obstructs navigation in a river.
(US, slang, when ordering food) A slice of toast.
(by extension) Any flattish thing, usually wooden, used in a similar fashion.
(cooking) A mass of congealed solids that forms on a consommé because of the protein in the egg white.
A flat-bottomed craft able to float and drift on water, used for transport or as a waterborne platform.
A large (but unspecified) number, a lot.
A square array of sensors forming part of a large telescope.
A thick crowd of seabirds or sea mammals, particularly a group of penguins when in the water.
verb
(archaic) simple past tense and past participle of reave
(graphical user interface) To dock (toolbars, etc.) so that they share horizontal or vertical space.
(intransitive) To travel by raft.
(transitive) To convey on a raft.
(transitive) To make into a raft.
rant
rant
noun
A criticism done by ranting.
A type of dance step usually performed in clogs, and particularly (but not exclusively) associated with the English North West Morris tradition. The rant step consists of alternately bringing one foot across and in front of the other and striking the ground, with the other foot making a little hop.
A wild, emotional, and sometimes incoherent articulation.
verb
(dated) To speak extravagantly, as in merriment.
To criticize by ranting.
To dance rant steps.
To disseminate one's own opinions in a - typically - one-sided, strong manner.
To speak or shout at length in uncontrollable anger.
(comparable) Very interested, involved in something, absorbed, transfixed; fascinated or engrossed.
(not comparable) Lifted up into the air; transported into heaven.
(not comparable, archaic) Snatched, taken away; abducted.
noun
(obsolete) An ecstasy; a trance.
(obsolete) Rapidity.
verb
(obsolete) To carry away by force.
(obsolete) To transport or ravish.
rata
rata
noun
(usually countable) Any of various New Zealand plants of the genus Metrosideros
(usually uncountable) The hard dark red wood of such trees.
The yellow mangosteen, Garcinia dulcis, a tree native to Indonesia, the Philippines, and India.
rate
rate
noun
(horology) The gain or loss of a timepiece in a unit of time.
(nautical) A class into which ships were assigned based on condition, size etc.; by extension, rank.
(obsolete) Established portion or measure; fixed allowance; ration.
(obsolete) Order; arrangement.
(obsolete) Ratification; approval.
(obsolete) The worth of something; value.
A set price or charge for all examples of a given case, commodity, service etc.
A wage calculated in relation to a unit of time.
Any of various taxes, especially those levied by a local authority.
Speed.
The price of (an individual) thing; cost.
The proportional relationship between one amount, value etc. and another.
The relative speed of change or progress.
verb
(intransitive) To have position (in a certain class).
(intransitive) To have value or standing.
(transitive) To assign or be assigned a particular rank or level.
(transitive) To berate, scold.
(transitive) To consider or regard.
(transitive) To deserve; to be worth.
(transitive) To determine the limits of safe functioning for a machine or electrical device.
(transitive) To evaluate or estimate the value of.
(transitive) To ratify.
(transitive, chiefly Britain) To evaluate a property's value for the purposes of local taxation.
(transitive, informal) To like; to think highly of.
To ascertain the exact rate of the gain or loss of (a chronometer) as compared with true time.
rath
rath
adj
Alternative form of rathe.
noun
(historical) A walled enclosure, especially in Ireland; a ringfort built sometime between the Iron Age and the Viking Age.
A Burmese carriage of state.
rato
rato
noun
Alternative form of RATO
rats
rats
intj
(informal) Expression of annoyance or disgust; damn, darn.
(informal) Expression of disbelief.
noun
plural of rat
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of rat
rbtl
rcpt
rcpt
noun
Abbreviation of receipt.
rdte
rect
rect
noun
(computer graphics) Short for rectangle.
reet
reet
adj
(Tyneside) right
reft
reft
noun
A chink; a rift.
regt
reit
reit
noun
(UK, dialect, obsolete) sedge; seaweed
rent
rent
adj
That has been torn or rent; ripped; torn.
noun
(economics) A profit from possession of a valuable right, as a restricted license to engage in a trade or business.
(obsolete) Income; revenue.
A division or schism.
A payment made by a tenant at intervals in order to occupy a property.
A similar payment for the use of a product, equipment or a service.
A tear or rip in some surface.
An object for which rent is charged or paid.
verb
(intransitive) To be leased or let for rent.
(transitive) To grant occupation in return for rent.
(transitive) To obtain or have temporary possession of an object (e.g. a movie) in exchange for money.
(transitive) To occupy premises in exchange for rent.
simple past tense and past participle of rend
rept
rest
rest
noun
(UK, finance) A surplus held as a reserved fund by a bank to equalize its dividends, etc.; in the Bank of England, the balance of assets above liabilities.
(countable) Any object designed to be used to support something else.
(countable) Any relief from exertion; a state of quiet and relaxation.
(dated) A set or game at tennis.
(euphemistic, uncountable) A final position after death.
(music, countable) A pause of a specified length in a piece of music.
(music, countable) A written symbol indicating such a pause in a musical score such as in sheet music.
(physics, uncountable) Absence of motion.
(poetry) A short pause in reading poetry; a caesura.
(snooker, countable) A stick with a U-, V- or X-shaped head used to support the tip of a cue when the cue ball is otherwise out of reach.
(uncountable) Peace; freedom from worry, anxiety, annoyances; tranquility.
(uncountable) That which remains.
(uncountable, of a person or animal) Relief from work or activity by sleeping; sleep.
(uncountable, of an object or concept) A state of inactivity; a state of little or no motion; a state of completion.
A place where one may rest, either temporarily, as in an inn, or permanently, as, in an abode.
A projection from the right side of the cuirass of armour, serving to support the lance.
The striking of a balance at regular intervals in a running account. Often, specifically, the intervals after which compound interest is added to capital.
Those not included in a proposition or description; the remainder; others.
verb
(intransitive) To be free from that which harasses or disturbs; be quiet or still; be undisturbed.
(intransitive) To cease from action, motion, work, or performance of any kind; stop; desist; be without motion.
(intransitive) To come to a pause or an end; end.
(intransitive) To lie dormant.
(intransitive) To rely or depend on.
(intransitive) To sleep the final sleep; sleep in death; die; be dead.
(intransitive) To sleep; slumber.
(intransitive) To stay, remain, be situated.
(intransitive, transitive, law, US) To complete one's active advocacy in a trial or other proceeding, and thus to wait for the outcome (however, one is still generally available to answer questions, etc.)
(intransitive, transitive, reflexive, copulative) To be or to put into a state of rest.
(no object, with complement) To continue to be, remain, be left in a certain way.
(obsolete, transitive, colloquial) To arrest.
(transitive, intransitive, reflexive) To lean, lie, or lay.
(transitive, obsolete) To keep a certain way.
To be satisfied; to acquiesce.
reta
retd
rete
rete
noun
(anatomy) A network of blood vessels or nerves.
A rotating cutaway plate or overlay on an astrolabe or starmap which represents the horizon; used to locate stars and other astronomical features.
An anatomical part resembling or including a network.
rets
rets
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of ret
rett
rhet
rift
rift
noun
A break in the clouds, fog, mist etc., which allows light through.
A chasm or fissure.
A shallow place in a stream; a ford.
verb
(intransitive) To form a rift; to split open.
(obsolete outside Scotland and northern UK) To belch.
(transitive) To cleave; to rive; to split.
riot
riot
noun
(colloquial, uncountable) A humorous or entertaining event or person.
(figurative) A wide and unconstrained variety.
(obsolete) Excessive and expensive feasting; wild and loose festivity; revelry.
A tumultuous disturbance of the public peace by a large group of people, often involving violence or damage to property.
Wanton or unrestrained behavior or emotion.
verb
(intransitive) To create or take part in a riot; to raise an uproar or sedition.
(intransitive, obsolete) To act in an unrestrained or wanton manner; to indulge in excess of feasting, luxury, etc.
(transitive) To annoy.
(transitive) To cause to riot; to throw into a tumult.
rist
rita
rite
rite
adj
Informal spelling of right.
noun
(by extension) A prescribed behavior.
A religious custom.
part of the contraction and interjection amirite
used in unique spellings of company brand names
riti
ritz
ritz
noun
(informal, usually preceded by the) A display of ostentatious elegance.
verb
(informal) To behave in an ostentatiously elegant manner.
rket
roit
root
root
noun
(Australia, New Zealand, vulgar, slang) A sexual partner.
(Australia, New Zealand, vulgar, slang) An act of sexual intercourse.
(arithmetic) A square root (understood if no power is specified; in which case, "the root of" is often abbreviated to "root").
(arithmetic) Of a number or expression, a number which, when raised to a specified power, yields the specified number or expression.
(aviation) The section of a wing immediately adjacent to the fuselage.
(computing) In UNIX terminology, the first user account with complete access to the operating system and its configuration, found at the root of the directory structure; the person who manages accounts on a UNIX system.
(computing) The highest directory of a directory structure which may contain both files and subdirectories.
(engineering) The bottom of the thread of a threaded object.
(figurative) The primary source; origin.
(graph theory, computing) The single node of a tree that has no parent.
(linguistic morphology) The primary lexical unit of a word, which carries the most significant aspects of semantic content and cannot be reduced into smaller constituents. Inflectional stems often derive from roots.
(linguistics) A word from which another word or words are derived.
(mathematical analysis) A zero (of an equation).
(music) The fundamental tone of any chord; the tone from whose harmonics, or overtones, a chord is composed.
(slang) A penis, especially the base of a penis.
A root vegetable.
The lowest place, position, or part.
The part of a hair near the skin that has not been dyed, permed, or otherwise treated.
The part of a hair under the skin that holds the hair in place.
The part of a plant, generally underground, that anchors and supports the plant body, absorbs and stores water and nutrients, and in some plants is able to perform vegetative reproduction.
The part of a tooth extending into the bone holding the tooth in place.
verb
(Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, vulgar, slang) To sexually penetrate.
(by extension) To seek favour or advancement by low arts or grovelling servility; to fawn.
(computing slang, transitive) To get root or privileged access on a computer system or mobile phone, often through bypassing some security mechanism.
(intransitive) Of a baby: to turn the head and open the mouth in search of food.
(intransitive) To rummage; to search as if by digging in soil.
(intransitive, with "for" or "on", US) To cheer (on); to show support (for) and hope for the success of. (See root for.)
(transitive) To root out; to abolish.
(transitive, intransitive) To turn up or dig with the snout.
To be firmly fixed; to be established.
To grow roots; to enter the earth, as roots; to take root and begin to grow.
To prepare, oversee, or otherwise cause the rooting of cuttings.
rort
rort
noun
(Australia, New Zealand) A scam or fraud, especially involving the misappropriation of public money or resources.
verb
(Australia, New Zealand, transitive) To cheat or defraud.
rost
rost
noun
(Scotland) Alternative form of roust (a strong tide or current)
rota
rota
noun
(Britain) A schedule that allocates some task, responsibility or (rarely) privilege between a set of people according to a (possibly periodic) calendar.
(music) A kind of zither, played like a guitar, used in the Middle Ages in church music.
rotc
rote
rote
adj
By repetition or practice.
noun
(music) A kind of guitar, the notes of which were produced by a small wheel or wheel-like arrangement; an instrument similar to the hurdy-gurdy.
(rare) The roar of the surf; the sound of waves breaking on the shore.
Mechanical routine; a fixed, habitual, repetitive, or mechanical course of procedure.
Synonym of crowd.
verb
(obsolete) To go out by rotation or succession; to rotate.
(transitive) To learn or repeat by rote.
roth
roti
roti
noun
A kind of unleavened flatbread commonly consumed in South Asia and the Caribbean.
Nepalis eat sweet fried rice-flour doughnuts called sel roti.
rotl
rotl
noun
(historical units of measure) Alternative form of rottol: a former Middle Eastern and North African unit of weight, usually 1–5 pounds (0.5–2.5 kg).
roto
roto
noun
(US, sports, informal, uncountable) Clipping of rotisserie baseball.
(US, sports, informal, uncountable) Clipping of rotisserie sports.
(countable) A Chilean, especially a common man or lower-class Chilean.
(countable, uncountable) Clipping of rotogravure.
verb
(informal) Clipping of rotoscope.
rots
rots
noun
plural of rot
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of rot
rout
rout
noun
(Scotland, obsolete) The brant or brent goose (Branta bernicla).
(chiefly Scotland) A loud, resounding noise, especially one made by the sea, thunder, wind, etc.; a roar.
(chiefly Scotland, archaic) A violent movement; a heavy or stunning blow or stroke.
(countable) A group of (often violent) criminals or gangsters; such people as a class; (more generally) a disorderly and tumultuous crowd, a mob; hence (archaic, preceded by the), the common people as a group, the rabble.
(countable) A group of disorganized things.
(countable, archaic) A group of animals, especially one which is lively or unruly, or made up of wild animals such as wolves; a flock, a herd, a pack.
(countable, archaic) A noisy disturbance; also, a disorderly argument or fight, a brawl; (uncountable) disturbance of the peace, commotion, tumult.
(countable, dated) A fashionable assembly; a large evening party, a soirée.
(countable, law, historical) An illegal assembly of people; specifically, three or more people who have come together intending to do something illegal, and who have taken steps towards this, regarded as more serious than an unlawful assembly but not as serious as a riot; the act of assembling in this manner.
(countable, obsolete) A group of people; a crowd, a throng, a troop; in particular (archaic), a group of people accompanying or travelling with someone.
(military, also figurative) The retreat of an enemy force, etc., in this manner; also (archaic, rare), the army, enemy force, etc., so retreating.
(originally military) The act of completely defeating an army or other enemy force, causing it to retreat in a disorganized manner; (by extension) in politics, sport, etc.: a convincing defeat; a thrashing, a trouncing.
A loud shout; a bellow, a roar; also, an instance of loud and continued exclamation or shouting; a clamour, an outcry.
A lowing or mooing sound by an animal, especially cattle; a bellow, a moo.
verb
(intransitive) Of a person: to search through belongings, a place, etc.; to rummage.
(intransitive) Of a person: to speak loudly; to bellow, roar, to shout.
(intransitive) Of an animal, especially cattle: to low or moo loudly; to bellow.
(intransitive, Scotland, archaic) Especially of the sea, thunder, wind, etc.: to make a loud roaring noise; to howl, to roar, to rumble.
(intransitive, archaic) To retreat from a confrontation in disorder.
(intransitive, chiefly England, regional) To make a noise; to bellow, to roar, to snort.
(intransitive, chiefly England, regional) To snore, especially loudly.
(intransitive, obsolete) To assemble in a crowd, whether orderly or disorderly; to collect in company.
(transitive) Of a person: to say or shout (something) loudly.
(transitive) To completely defeat and force into disorderly retreat (an enemy force, opponent in sport, etc.).
(transitive) To dig or plough (earth or the ground); to till.
(transitive) Usually followed by out or up: of a person: to search for and find (something); also (transitive) to completely empty or clear out (something).
(transitive) Usually followed by out or up: to dig or pull up (a plant) by the roots; to extirpate, to uproot.
(transitive, chiefly US) Usually followed by from: to compel (someone) to leave a place; specifically (usually followed by out or up), to cause (someone) to get out of bed.
(transitive, figurative) Usually followed by out: to find and eradicate (something harmful or undesirable); to root out.
(transitive, intransitive) Of an animal, especially a pig: to search (for something) in the ground with the snout; to root.
(transitive, intransitive) To use a gouge, router, or other tool to scoop out material (from a metallic, wooden, etc., surface), forming a groove or recess.
(transitive, intransitive, chiefly Scotland, archaic) To beat or strike (someone or something); to assail (someone or something) with blows.
rowt
rowt
noun
(chiefly UK) Alternative form of rout A loud noise.
verb
(chiefly UK) Alternative form of rout To make a loud noise.
royt
rsts
rtac
rtfm
rtls
rtmp
rtse
rtsl
rtty
runt
runt
noun
(by extension) The smallest child in the family.
(networking) An Ethernet packet that does not meet the medium's minimum packet size of 64 bytes.
(obsolete, UK, dialect) A hardened stem or stalk of a plant.
(slang) An uninfluential or unimportant person; a nobody.
(typography) A single word (or portion of a hyphenated word) that appears as the last line of a paragraph.
A bow.
A breed of pigeon related to the carrier pigeon.
The smallest animal of a litter.
Undersized or stunted plant, animal or person.
rust
rust
noun
(philately) Damage caused to stamps and album pages by a fungal infection.
A disease of plants caused by a reddish-brown fungus.
A similar substance based on another metal (usually with qualification, such as "copper rust").
The deteriorated state of iron or steel as a result of moisture and oxidation.
verb
(intransitive) Of a black cat or its fur, to turn rust-coloured following long periods of exposure to sunlight.
(intransitive) To be affected with the parasitic fungus called rust.
(intransitive) To oxidize, especially of iron or steel.
(transitive) To cause to oxidize.
(transitive, intransitive, figuratively) To (cause to) degenerate in idleness; to make or become dull or impaired by inaction.
ruta
ruth
ruth
noun
(archaic) Sorrow for the misery of another; pity, compassion; mercy.
(now rare) Repentance; regret; remorse.
(obsolete) Something which causes regret or sorrow; a pitiful sight.
(obsolete) Sorrow; misery; distress.
ruts
ruts
noun
plural of rut
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of rut
rynt
rynt
verb
(archaic, reflexive) stand off; move away (said by milkmaids to their cows after milking them)