Words that rhyme with alee
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neighbourly
adj 1: exhibiting the qualities expected in a friendly neighbor [syn: neighborly, neighbourly] -
rationally
adv 1: in a rational manner; "we must act rationally" [ant: irrationally] -
enrollee
n 1: a person who enrolls in (or is enrolled in) a class or course of study -
ab
n 1: a bachelor's degree in arts and sciences [syn: Bachelor of Arts, BA, Artium Baccalaurens, AB] 2: the eleventh month of the civil year; the fifth month of the ecclesiastical year in the Jewish calendar (in July and August) [syn: Ab, Av] 3: the muscles of the abdomen [syn: abdominal, abdominal muscle, ab] 4: the blood group whose red cells carry both the A and B antigens [syn: AB, type AB, group AB] -
abnormally
adv 1: in an abnormal manner; "they were behaving abnormally"; "his blood pressure was abnormally low" -
abysmally
adv 1: in a terrible manner; "she sings terribly" [syn: terribly, atrociously, awfully, abominably, abysmally, rottenly] -
accidentally
adv 1: without advance planning; "they met accidentally" [syn: by chance, accidentally, circumstantially, unexpectedly] [ant: advisedly, by choice, by design, deliberately, designedly, intentionally, on purpose, purposely] 2: of a minor or subordinate nature; "these magnificent achievements were only incidentally influenced by Oriental models" [syn: incidentally, accidentally] 3: without intention; in an unintentional manner; "she hit him unintentionally" [syn: unintentionally, accidentally] [ant: advisedly, by choice, by design, deliberately, designedly, intentionally, on purpose, purposely] -
actually
adv 1: in actual fact; "to be nominally but not actually independent"; "no one actually saw the shark"; "large meteorites actually come from the asteroid belt" [syn: actually, really] 2: used to imply that one would expect the fact to be the opposite of that stated; surprisingly; "you may actually be doing the right thing by walking out"; "she actually spoke Latin"; "they thought they made the rules but in reality they were only puppets"; "people who seem stand-offish are in reality often simply nervous" [syn: actually, in reality] 3: at the present moment; "the transmission screen shows the picture that is actually on the air" 4: as a sentence modifier to add slight emphasis; "actually, we all help clear up after a meal"; "actually, I haven't seen the film"; "I'm not all that surprised actually"; "she hasn't proved to be too satisfactory, actually" -
additionally
adv 1: in addition, by way of addition; furthermore; "he serves additionally as the CEO" [syn: additionally, to boot] -
adjectivally
adv 1: as an adjective; in an adjectival manner -
adoptee
n 1: someone (such as a child) who has been adopted -
agree
v 1: be in accord; be in agreement; "We agreed on the terms of the settlement"; "I can't agree with you!"; "I hold with those who say life is sacred"; "Both philosophers concord on this point" [syn: agree, hold, concur, concord] [ant: differ, disagree, dissent, take issue] 2: consent or assent to a condition, or agree to do something; "She agreed to all my conditions"; "He agreed to leave her alone" 3: be compatible, similar or consistent; coincide in their characteristics; "The two stories don't agree in many details"; "The handwriting checks with the signature on the check"; "The suspect's fingerprints don't match those on the gun" [syn: match, fit, correspond, check, jibe, gibe, tally, agree] [ant: disaccord, disagree, discord] 4: go together; "The colors don't harmonize"; "Their ideas concorded" [syn: harmonize, harmonise, consort, accord, concord, fit in, agree] 5: show grammatical agreement; "Subjects and verbs must always agree in English" 6: be agreeable or suitable; "White wine doesn't agree with me" 7: achieve harmony of opinion, feeling, or purpose; "No two of my colleagues would agree on whom to elect chairman" -
airily
adv 1: in a flippant manner; "he answered the reporters' questions flippantly"; "this cannot be airily explained to your children" [syn: flippantly, airily] -
amputee
n 1: someone who has had a limb removed by amputation -
angrily
adv 1: with anger; "he angrily denied the accusation" -
annually
adv 1: without missing a year; "they travel to China annually" [syn: annually, yearly, every year, each year] 2: by the year; every year (usually with reference to a sum of money paid or received); "he earned $100,000 per annum"; "we issue six volumes per annum" [syn: per annum, p.a., per year, each year, annually] -
anomaly
n 1: deviation from the normal or common order or form or rule [syn: anomaly, anomalousness] 2: a person who is unusual [syn: anomaly, unusual person] 3: (astronomy) position of a planet as defined by its angular distance from its perihelion (as observed from the sun) -
appointee
n 1: an official who is appointed 2: a person who is appointed to a job or position [syn: appointee, appointment] -
arbitrarily
adv 1: in a random manner; "the houses were randomly scattered"; "bullets were fired into the crowd at random" [syn: randomly, indiscriminately, haphazardly, willy- nilly, arbitrarily, at random, every which way] -
argali
n 1: wild sheep of semidesert regions in central Asia [syn: argali, argal, Ovis ammon] -
artfully
adv 1: in an artful manner; "her foot pointed artfully toward tapering toes" 2: in a disingenuous manner; "disingenuously, he asked leading questions abut his opponent's work" [syn: disingenuously, artfully] 3: in an artful manner; "he craftily arranged to be there when the decision was announced"; "had ever circumstances conspired so cunningly?" [syn: craftily, cunningly, foxily, knavishly, slyly, trickily, artfully] -
artificially
adv 1: not according to nature; not by natural means; "artificially induced conditions" [syn: artificially, unnaturally, by artificial means] [ant: naturally] -
awfully
adv 1: used as intensifiers; "terribly interesting"; "I'm awful sorry" [syn: terribly, awfully, awful, frightfully] 2: of a dreadful kind; "there was a dreadfully bloody accident on the road this morning" [syn: dreadfully, awfully, horribly] 3: in a terrible manner; "she sings terribly" [syn: terribly, atrociously, awfully, abominably, abysmally, rottenly] -
axially
adv 1: with respect to an axis; "the jet was directed axially toward the cathode" -
banshee
n 1: (Irish folklore) a female spirit who wails to warn of impending death [syn: banshee, banshie] -
be
n 1: a light strong brittle grey toxic bivalent metallic element [syn: beryllium, Be, glucinium, atomic number 4] v 1: have the quality of being; (copula, used with an adjective or a predicate noun); "John is rich"; "This is not a good answer" 2: be identical to; be someone or something; "The president of the company is John Smith"; "This is my house" 3: occupy a certain position or area; be somewhere; "Where is my umbrella?" "The toolshed is in the back"; "What is behind this behavior?" 4: have an existence, be extant; "Is there a God?" [syn: exist, be] 5: happen, occur, take place; "I lost my wallet; this was during the visit to my parents' house"; "There were two hundred people at his funeral"; "There was a lot of noise in the kitchen" 6: be identical or equivalent to; "One dollar equals 1,000 rubles these days!" [syn: equal, be] [ant: differ] 7: form or compose; "This money is my only income"; "The stone wall was the backdrop for the performance"; "These constitute my entire belonging"; "The children made up the chorus"; "This sum represents my entire income for a year"; "These few men comprise his entire army" [syn: constitute, represent, make up, comprise, be] 8: work in a specific place, with a specific subject, or in a specific function; "He is a herpetologist"; "She is our resident philosopher" [syn: be, follow] 9: represent, as of a character on stage; "Derek Jacobi was Hamlet" [syn: embody, be, personify] 10: spend or use time; "I may be an hour" 11: have life, be alive; "Our great leader is no more"; "My grandfather lived until the end of war" [syn: be, live] 12: to remain unmolested, undisturbed, or uninterrupted -- used only in infinitive form; "let her be" 13: be priced at; "These shoes cost $100" [syn: cost, be] -
bee
n 1: any of numerous hairy-bodied insects including social and solitary species 2: a social gathering to carry out some communal task or to hold competitions -
beneficially
adv 1: in a beneficial manner; "this medicine will act beneficially on you" -
bilaterally
adv 1: with the involvement of two parties or governments; "they worked out an agreement bilaterally" 2: so as to involve two sides or parts -
blissfully
adv 1: in a blissful manner; "he was blissfully unaware of the danger" -
bodily
adv 1: in bodily form; "he was translated bodily to heaven" adj 1: of or relating to or belonging to the body; "a bodily organ"; "bodily functions" 2: affecting or characteristic of the body as opposed to the mind or spirit; "bodily needs"; "a corporal defect"; "corporeal suffering"; "a somatic symptom or somatic illness" [syn: bodily, corporal, corporeal, somatic] 3: having or relating to a physical material body; "bodily existence" -
bourgeoisie
n 1: the social class between the lower and upper classes [syn: middle class, bourgeoisie] -
brie
n 1: soft creamy white cheese; milder than Camembert -
broccoli
n 1: plant with dense clusters of tight green flower buds [syn: broccoli, Brassica oleracea italica] 2: branched green undeveloped flower heads -
brutally
adv 1: in a vicious manner; "he was viciously attacked" [syn: viciously, brutally, savagely] -
bubbly
adj 1: emitting or filled with bubbles as from carbonation or fermentation; "bubbling champagne"; "foamy (or frothy) beer" [syn: bubbling, bubbly, foaming, foamy, frothy, effervescing, spumy] 2: full of or showing high spirits; "bright bubbly children"; "a bubbly personality" n 1: a white sparkling wine either produced in Champagne or resembling that produced there [syn: champagne, bubbly] -
busily
adv 1: in a busy manner; "they were busily engaged in buying souvenirs" -
carefully
adv 1: taking care or paying attention; "they watched carefully" 2: as if with kid gloves; with caution or prudence or tact; "she ventured cautiously downstairs"; "they handled the incident with kid gloves" [syn: cautiously, carefully] [ant: carelessly, incautiously] -
casually
adv 1: not methodically or according to plan; "he dealt with his course work casually" 2: in an unconcerned manner; "glanced casually at the headlines" [syn: casually, nonchalantly] -
cc
adj 1: being ten more than one hundred ninety [syn: two hundred, 200, cc] n 1: a metric unit of volume equal to one thousandth of a liter [syn: milliliter, millilitre, mil, ml, cubic centimeter, cubic centimetre, cc] -
centrally
adv 1: in or near or toward a center or according to a central role or function; "The theater is centrally located" [ant: peripherally] -
cerebrally
adv 1: in an intellectual manner; "cerebrally active" 2: in the brain; "bleeding cerebrally" -
charily
adv 1: with great caution; warily -
cheerfully
adv 1: in a cheerful manner; "he cheerfully agreed to do it" [ant: cheerlessly] -
chickadee
n 1: any of various small grey-and-black songbirds of North America -
chronically
adv 1: in a habitual and longstanding manner; "smoking chronically" [syn: chronically, inveterate] 2: in a slowly developing and long lasting manner; "chronically ill persons" [ant: acutely] -
civilly
adv 1: in a civil manner; "he treats his former wife civilly" [ant: uncivilly] -
clinically
adv 1: in a clinical manner; "she is clinically qualified" -
clumsily
adv 1: in a clumsy manner; "he snatched the bills clumsily" -
cod
adv 1: collecting the charges upon delivery; "mail a package C.O.D." [syn: C.O.D., COD, cash on delivery] adj 1: payable by the recipient on delivery; "a collect call"; "the letter came collect"; "a COD parcel" [syn: collect, cod] n 1: the vessel that contains the seeds of a plant (not the seeds themselves) [syn: pod, cod, seedcase] 2: lean white flesh of important North Atlantic food fish; usually baked or poached [syn: cod, codfish] 3: major food fish of Arctic and cold-temperate waters [syn: cod, codfish] v 1: fool or hoax; "The immigrant was duped because he trusted everyone"; "You can't fool me!" [syn: gull, dupe, slang, befool, cod, fool, put on, take in, put one over, put one across] 2: harass with persistent criticism or carping; "The children teased the new teacher"; "Don't ride me so hard over my failure"; "His fellow workers razzed him when he wore a jacket and tie" [syn: tease, razz, rag, cod, tantalize, tantalise, bait, taunt, twit, rally, ride] -
comically
adv 1: in a comical manner; "the tone was comically desperate" -
commercially
adv 1: in a commercial manner; "the product is commercially available" -
conceptually
adv 1: in a conceptual manner; "he can no longer think conceptually"; "conceptually, the idea is quite simple" -
conferee
n 1: a person on whom something is bestowed; "six honorary were conferred; the conferees were..." 2: a member of a conference -
continually
adv 1: seemingly without interruption; "complained continually that there wasn't enough money" -
contumely
n 1: a rude expression intended to offend or hurt; "when a student made a stupid mistake he spared them no abuse"; "they yelled insults at the visiting team" [syn: abuse, insult, revilement, contumely, vilification] -
cordially
adv 1: in a hearty manner; "`Yes,' the children chorused heartily"; "We welcomed her warmly" [syn: heartily, cordially, warmly] -
crazily
adv 1: in an insane manner; "she behaved insanely"; "he behaves crazily when he is off his medication"; "the witch cackled madly"; "screaming dementedly" [syn: insanely, crazily, dementedly, madly] [ant: sanely] -
criminally
adv 1: in a shameful manner; "the garden was criminally neglected" [syn: criminally, reprehensively] 2: in violation of the law; in a criminal manner; "the alterations in the document were ruled to be criminally fraudulent" -
critically
adv 1: in a critical manner; "this must be examined critically" [ant: uncritically] -
crucially
adv 1: to a crucial degree; "crucially important"; "crucially, he must meet us at the airport" -
culturally
adv 1: with regard to a culture; "culturally integrated" -
curie
n 1: a unit of radioactivity equal to the amount of a radioactive isotope that decays at the rate of 37,000,000,000 disintegrations per second [syn: curie, Ci] 2: French physicist; husband of Marie Curie (1859-1906) [syn: Curie, Pierre Curie] 3: French chemist (born in Poland) who won two Nobel prizes; one (with her husband and Henri Becquerel) for research on radioactivity and another for her discovery of radium and polonium (1867-1934) [syn: Curie, Marie Curie, Madame Curie, Marya Sklodowska] -
customarily
adv 1: by custom; according to common practice; "children are custosby-the-waymarily expected to be seen but not heard" -
cynically
adv 1: with cynicism; in a cynical manner; "Larsen's frost- blackened lips curved cynically" -
debris
n 1: the remains of something that has been destroyed or broken up [syn: debris, dust, junk, rubble, detritus] -
decree
n 1: a legally binding command or decision entered on the court record (as if issued by a court or judge); "a friend in New Mexico said that the order caused no trouble out there" [syn: decree, edict, fiat, order, rescript] v 1: issue a decree; "The King only can decree" 2: decide with authority; "The King decreed that all firstborn males should be killed" [syn: rule, decree] -
degree
n 1: a position on a scale of intensity or amount or quality; "a moderate grade of intelligence"; "a high level of care is required"; "it is all a matter of degree" [syn: degree, grade, level] 2: a specific identifiable position in a continuum or series or especially in a process; "a remarkable degree of frankness"; "at what stage are the social sciences?" [syn: degree, level, stage, point] 3: an award conferred by a college or university signifying that the recipient has satisfactorily completed a course of study; "he earned his degree at Princeton summa cum laude" [syn: academic degree, degree] 4: a measure for arcs and angles; "there are 360 degrees in a circle" [syn: degree, arcdegree] 5: the highest power of a term or variable 6: a unit of temperature on a specified scale; "the game was played in spite of the 40-degree temperature" 7: the seriousness of something (e.g., a burn or crime); "murder in the second degree"; "a second degree burn" -
delightfully
adv 1: in a delightful manner; "the farm house, though in itself a small one, is delightfully situated" -
deportee
n 1: a person who is expelled from home or country by authority [syn: exile, deportee] -
detainee
n 1: some held in custody [syn: detainee, political detainee] -
devotee
n 1: an ardent follower and admirer [syn: fan, buff, devotee, lover] -
diagonally
adv 1: in a diagonal manner; "she lives diagonally across the street from us" -
diastole
n 1: the widening of the chambers of the heart between two contractions when the chambers fill with blood -
digitally
adv 1: by means of the fingers; "the exam was carried out digitally" 2: in terms of integers; "the time was digitally displayed" -
disagree
v 1: be of different opinions; "I beg to differ!"; "She disagrees with her husband on many questions" [syn: disagree, differ, dissent, take issue] [ant: agree, concord, concur, hold] 2: be different from one another [syn: disagree, disaccord, discord] [ant: agree, check, correspond, fit, gibe, jibe, match, tally] -
dismally
adv 1: in a cheerless manner; "in August 1914 , there was a dismally sentimental little dinner, when the French, German, Austrian and Belgian members of the committee drank together to the peace of the future" [syn: dismally, drearily] 2: in a dreadful manner; "as he looks at the mess he has left behind he must wonder how the Brits so often managed to succeed in the kind of situation where he has so dismally failed" [syn: dismally, dreadfully] -
dorsally
adv 1: in a dorsal location or direction -
draftee
n 1: someone who is drafted into military service [syn: draftee, conscript, inductee] [ant: military volunteer, voluntary, volunteer] -
dramatically
adv 1: in a very impressive manner; "your performance will improve dramatically" 2: in a dramatic manner; "he confessed dramatically" [ant: undramatically] 3: with respect to dramatic value; "the play was dramatically interesting, but the direction was bad" -
dreadfully
adv 1: of a dreadful kind; "there was a dreadfully bloody accident on the road this morning" [syn: dreadfully, awfully, horribly] 2: in a dreadful manner; "as he looks at the mess he has left behind he must wonder how the Brits so often managed to succeed in the kind of situation where he has so dismally failed" [syn: dismally, dreadfully] -
dutifully
adv 1: out of a sense of duty; in a dutiful manner; "he dutifully visited his mother every Sunday" -
easily
adv 1: with ease (`easy' is sometimes used informally for `easily'); "she was easily excited"; "was easily confused"; "he won easily"; "this china breaks very easily"; "success came too easy" [syn: easily, easy] 2: without question; "easily the best book she's written" 3: indicating high probability; in all likelihood; "I might well do it"; "a mistake that could easily have ended in disaster"; "you may well need your umbrella"; "he could equally well be trying to deceive us" [syn: well, easily] -
ecologically
adv 1: with respect to ecology; "ecologically speaking, this idea is brilliant; economically, it is a disaster" -
editorially
adv 1: by means of an editorial; "the paper commented editorially on the scandal" -
eerily
adv 1: in an unnatural eery manner; "it was eerily quiet in the chapel" [syn: eerily, spookily] -
electrically
adv 1: by electricity; "electrically controlled" -
elementarily
adv 1: in an elementary manner -
emcee
n 1: a person who acts as host at formal occasions (makes an introductory speech and introduces other speakers) [syn: master of ceremonies, emcee, host] v 1: act as a master of ceremonies [syn: emcee, compere] -
emotionally
adv 1: in an emotional manner; "at the funeral he spoke emotionally" [ant: unemotionally] 2: with regard to emotions; "emotionally secure" -
emphatically
adv 1: without question and beyond doubt; "it was decidedly too expensive"; "she told him off in spades"; "by all odds they should win" [syn: decidedly, unquestionably, emphatically, definitely, in spades, by all odds] -
empirically
adv 1: in an empirical manner; "this can be empirically tested" [syn: empirically, through empirical observation, by trial and error] [ant: theoretically] -
enlistee
n 1: any new member or supporter (as in the armed forces) [syn: recruit, enlistee] -
equally
adv 1: to the same degree (often followed by `as'); "they were equally beautiful"; "birds were singing and the child sang as sweetly"; "sang as sweetly as a nightingale"; "he is every bit as mean as she is" [syn: equally, as, every bit] 2: in equal amounts or shares; in a balanced or impartial way; "a class evenly divided between girls and boys"; "they split their winnings equally"; "deal equally with rich and poor" [syn: evenly, equally] [ant: unequally, unevenly] -
escapee
n 1: someone who escapes -
especially
adv 1: to a distinctly greater extent or degree than is common; "he was particularly fussy about spelling"; "a particularly gruesome attack"; "under peculiarly tragic circumstances"; "an especially (or specially) cautious approach to the danger" [syn: particularly, peculiarly, especially, specially] 2: in a special manner; "a specially arranged dinner" [syn: specially, especially] -
esprit
n 1: liveliness of mind or spirit -
essentially
adv 1: in essence; at bottom or by one's (or its) very nature; "He is basically dishonest"; "the argument was essentially a technical one"; "for all his bluster he is in essence a shy person" [syn: basically, fundamentally, essentially] -
eternally
adv 1: for a limitless time; "no one can live forever"; "brightly beams our Father's mercy from his lighthouse evermore"- P.P.Bliss [syn: everlastingly, eternally, forever, evermore] -
ethically
adv 1: in an ethical manner; from an ethical point of view; according to ethics; "he behaved ethically"; "this is ethically unacceptable" [ant: unethically]
See also alee definition
