Table of Contents
Rhymes with Four Letter Anglo Saxon Word
- transferred
- transfered
- undeterred
- uncured
- preferred
- prefered
- overheard
- misheard
- conferred
- concurred
- unheard
- reword
- referred
- recurred
- interred
- inferred
- incurred
- deterred
- demurred
- deferred
- chauffeured
- alward
- absurd
- stirred
- spurred
- slurred
- occurred
- blurred
- third
- nerd
2. letter
noun. ['ˈlɛtɝ'] a written message addressed to a person or organization.
Synonyms
- PS
- dead mail
- missive
- correspondence
- name and address
- address
- postscript
- open letter
- form letter
- text
- crank letter
- aerogramme
- document
- airmail letter
- encyclical
- personal letter
- dead letter
- aerogram
- covering letter
- invitation
- cover letter
- encyclical letter
- fan letter
- business letter
- epistle
- textual matter
- letter of intent
- line
- air letter
- destination
- round robin
- chain letter
Antonyms
Etymology
- -er (English)
- -er (Middle English (1100-1500))
- let (English)
- leten (Middle English (1100-1500))
- letter (Middle English (1100-1500))
3. letter
noun. ['ˈlɛtɝ'] the conventional characters of the alphabet used to represent speech.
Synonyms
- R
- f
- zayin
- kaph
- X
- v
- m
- q
- spelling
- delta
- upsilon
- ezed
- zed
- ayin
- g
- descender
- d
- pe
- S
- kappa
- grapheme
- C
- alphabetic character
- O
- M
- theta
- vowel
- x
- block capital
- D
- teth
- samekh
- pi
- resh
- qoph
- ascender
- mu
- eta
- heth
- omicron
- Z
- P
- y
- graphic symbol
- T
- consonant
- wye
- sadhe
- beth
- G
- nu
- n
- character
- gamma
- digram
- beta
- I
- gimel
- rho
- phi
- double-u
- polyphonic letter
- shin
- psi
- w
- c
- he
- mem
- N
- zee
- polyphone
- initial
- J
- A
- taw
- K
- lamedh
- i
- iota
- r
- U
- H
- k
- letter of the alphabet
- j
- daleth
- sin
- xi
- B
- sigma
- epsilon
- l
- yodh
- omega
- lambda
- s
- t
- o
- Q
- h
- khi
- chi
- digraph
- b
- z
- zeta
- L
- block letter
- ex
- nun
- waw
- alphabet
- tau
- Y
- izzard
- aleph
- u
- alpha
- e
- V
- E
- W
- a
- F
Etymology
- -er (English)
- -er (Middle English (1100-1500))
- let (English)
- leten (Middle English (1100-1500))
- letter (Middle English (1100-1500))
4. word
noun. ['ˈwɝːd'] a unit of language that native speakers can identify.
Synonyms
- descriptor
- troponym
- term
- subordinate word
- vocable
- superordinate
- whole name
- dissyllable
- retronym
- head
- opposite word
- guideword
- loan-blend
- derivative
- cognate
- four-letter word
- catchword
- closed-class word
- metonym
- subordinate
- terminology
- antonym
- quantifier
- superordinate word
- hypernym
- meronym
- form
- written word
- oxytone
- partitive
- monosyllabic word
- content word
- diminutive
- neologism
- neology
- coinage
- dirty word
- equivalent word
- polysyllabic word
- manner name
- spoken word
- anagram
- cognate word
- synonym
- back-formation
- deictic word
- language
- loanblend
- polysyllable
- anaphor
- polysemant
- homonym
- primitive
- loan
- syllable
- headword
- hybrid
- head word
- signifier
- syncategoreme
- palindrome
- polysemantic word
- key word
- nonce word
- hapax legomenon
- affix
- deictic
- reduplication
- loanword
- monosyllable
- paroxytone
- four-letter Anglo-Saxon word
- disyllable
- classifier
- hyponym
- polysemous word
- nomenclature
- charade
- function word
- word form
- language unit
- syncategorem
- trisyllable
- open-class word
- proparoxytone
- linguistic unit
- substantive
- opposite
- contraction
- holonym
- logical quantifier
- guide word
- heteronym
Etymology
- word (Middle English (1100-1500))
- word (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
5. four
adjective. ['ˈfɔr'] being one more than three.
Etymology
- fower (Middle English (1100-1500))
- feower (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
6. word
noun. ['ˈwɝːd'] a brief statement.
Antonyms
Etymology
- word (Middle English (1100-1500))
- word (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
7. four
noun. ['ˈfɔr'] the cardinal number that is the sum of three and one.
Synonyms
Etymology
- fower (Middle English (1100-1500))
- feower (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
8. word
noun. ['ˈwɝːd'] information about recent and important events.
Antonyms
Etymology
- word (Middle English (1100-1500))
- word (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
9. word
noun. ['ˈwɝːd'] a verbal command for action.
Antonyms
Etymology
- word (Middle English (1100-1500))
- word (Old English (ca. 450-1100))