Matching Words
18713 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
 Suborn
- verb - incite to commit a crime or an evil deed; "He suborned his butler to cover up the murder of his wife"  
- induce to commit perjury or give false testimony; "The President tried to suborn false witnesses"  
- procure (false testimony or perjury)  
 Subset
- noun - a set whose members are members of another set; a set contained within another set  
 Subtle
- adjective -  difficult to detect or grasp by the mind or analyze; "his whole attitude had undergone a subtle change"; "a subtle difference"; "that elusive thing the soul"  
- able to make fine distinctions; "a subtle mind"  
- working or spreading in a hidden and usually injurious way; "glaucoma is an insidious disease"; "a subtle poison"  
 Subtly
- adverb - in a subtle manner; "late nineteenth-century French opera at its most beautiful, subtly romantic with a twilight melancholy"  
 Suburb
- noun - a residential district located on the outskirts of a city  
 Subway
- noun - an electric railway operating below the surface of the ground (usually in a city); "in Paris the subway system is called the `metro' and in London it is called the `tube' or the `underground'"  
- an underground tunnel or passage enabling pedestrians to cross a road or railway  
 Succor
- noun - assistance in time of difficulty; "the contributions provided some relief for the victims"  
- help in a difficult situation  
 Succos
- noun - a major Jewish festival beginning on the eve of the 15th of Tishri and commemorating the shelter of the Israelites during their 40 years in the wilderness  
 Succus
- noun - any of several liquids of the body; "digestive juices"  
 Sucked
- verb - attract by using an inexorable force, inducement, etc.; "The current boom in the economy sucked many workers in from abroad"  
- be inadequate or objectionable; "this sucks!"  
- draw into the mouth by creating a practical vacuum in the mouth; "suck the poison from the place where the snake bit"; "suck on a straw"; "the baby sucked on the mother's breast"  
- draw something in by or as if by a vacuum; "Mud was sucking at her feet"  
- give suck to; "The wetnurse suckled the infant"; "You cannot nurse your baby in public in some places"  
- provide sexual gratification through oral stimulation  
- take in, also metaphorically; "The sponge absorbs water well"; "She drew strength from the minister's words"