Matching Words
1367 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
Innings
- noun - (baseball) one of nine divisions of play during which each team has a turn at bat
- the batting turn of a cricket player or team
Insense
- - To make to understand; to instruct.
Insinew
- - To strengthen, as with sinews; to invigorate.
Intends
- verb - denote or connote; "`maison' means `house' in French"; "An example sentence would show what this word means"
- design or destine; "She was intended to become the director"
- have in mind as a purpose; "I mean no harm"; "I only meant to help you"; "She didn't think to harm me"; "We thought to return early that night"
- mean or intend to express or convey; "You never understand what I mean!"; "what do his words intend?"
Intense
- adjective - (of color) having the highest saturation; "vivid green"; "intense blue"
- extremely sharp or intense; "acute pain"; "felt acute annoyance"; "intense itching and burning"
- possessing or displaying a distinctive feature to a heightened degree; "intense heat"; "intense anxiety"; "intense desire"; "intense emotion"; "the skunk's intense acrid odor"; "intense pain"; "enemy fire was intense"
Intents
- noun - an anticipated outcome that is intended or that guides your planned actions; "
- the intended meaning of a communication
Intoned
- verb - recite with musical intonation; recite as a chant or a psalm; "The rabbi chanted a prayer"
- speak carefully, as with rising and falling pitch or in a particular tone; "please intonate with sadness"
- utter monotonously and repetitively and rhythmically; "The students chanted the same slogan over and over again"
- uttered in a monotonous cadence or rhythm as in chanting; "their chantlike intoned prayers"; "a singsong manner of speaking"
Intones
- verb - recite with musical intonation; recite as a chant or a psalm; "The rabbi chanted a prayer"
- speak carefully, as with rising and falling pitch or in a particular tone; "please intonate with sadness"
- utter monotonously and repetitively and rhythmically; "The students chanted the same slogan over and over again"