Matching Words
3642 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
Afterwise
- - Wise after the event; wise or knowing, when it is too late.
Afterword
- unknown - an epilogue: the last part of a book
Agreeable
- adjective - conforming to your own liking or feelings or nature; "Is the plan agreeable to you?"; "he's an agreeable fellow"; "My idea of an agreeable person...is a person who agrees with me"- Disraeli; "an agreeable manner"
- in keeping; "salaries agreeable with current trends"; "plans conformable with your wishes"; "expressed views concordant with his background"
- prepared to agree or consent; "agreeable to the plan"
Agreeably
- adverb - in an enjoyable manner; "we spent a pleasantly lazy afternoon"
Agreement
- noun - compatibility of observations; "there was no agreement between theory and measurement"; "the results of two tests were in correspondence"
- harmony of people's opinions or actions or characters; "the two parties were in agreement"
- the determination of grammatical inflection on the basis of word relations
- the statement (oral or written) of an exchange of promises; "they had an agreement that they would not interfere in each other's business"; "there was an understanding between management and the workers"
- the thing arranged or agreed to; "they made arrangements to meet in Chicago"
- the verbal act of agreeing
Ague Root
- noun - colicroot having a scurfy or granuliferous perianth and white flowers; southeastern United States
Ague Weed
- noun - gentian of eastern North America having clusters of bristly blue flowers
Agueweeds
- noun - gentian of eastern North America having clusters of bristly blue flowers
- perennial herb of southeastern United States having white-rayed flower heads; formerly used as in folk medicine
Ahuehuete
- noun - Mexico's most famous tree; a giant specimen of Montezuma cypress more than 2,000 years old with a girth of 165 feet at Santa Maria del Tule; "some say the Tule tree is the world's largest single biomass"
Akee Tree
- noun - widely cultivated in tropical and subtropical regions for its fragrant flowers and colorful fruits; introduced in Jamaica by William Bligh