💡 Words with a Similar Meaning to "Devil dodger"
Found via reverse dictionary — words that share a conceptual meaning.
| Word | Definition |
|---|---|
| devil dognoun | (slang) A US marine. |
| devilshipnoun | The character or person of a devil or Satan. |
| deviletnoun | (archaic) A little devil. |
| devilettenoun | (informal or humorous) A female devil. |
| dodgernoun | (countable) Someone who dodges (avoids something by quickly moving). |
| coffin dodgernoun | (slang, derogatory, humorous) An elderly person, a person close to death, or good at avoiding death. |
| devilingverb | A small or young devil. |
| dodmannoun | A land-based snail. |
| diuellnoun | Obsolete spelling of devil. [(theology) The chief devil; Satan.] |
| drevilnoun | (obsolete) A fool or drudge. |
| daisy-kickernoun | (UK, slang, obsolete) An ostler at a large inn. |
| divellnoun | Obsolete form of devil. [(theology) The chief devil; Satan.] |
| fleet street dovenoun | (archaic, British slang) A prostitute. |
| dossernoun | (British, Ireland) Someone who dosses, someone known for avoiding work. |
| duddernoun | (UK, dated) A peddler or hawker, especially of cheap and flashy goods pretended to be smuggled; a duffer. |
| doddienoun | Alternative form of doddy. [A hornless cow.] |
| divelnoun | (dialect or archaic) Alternative spelling of devil. [(theology) The chief devil; Satan.] |
| doddlenoun | (UK, Ireland, Australia, informal) A job, task, or other activity that is easy to complete or simple. |
| duellernoun | (British spelling) Alternative form of dueler. [a person who fights a duel] |
| dawcocknoun | (obsolete) A jackdaw. |
Translate “Devil dodger” into Another Language
Pick a language — the word will be pre-filled in the translator.