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Swind

💡 Words with a Similar Meaning to "Swind"

Found via reverse dictionary — words that share a conceptual meaning.

WordDefinition
squinnynoun(slang, from Des Moines) a chipmunk.
swindgenounAlternative form of swinge. [(archaic) A swinging blow.]
skennoun(Northern English) to glance
squinyverb(intransitive, obsolete) To squint.
gledgeverb(intransitive) To squint; to look cunningly.
snignoun(UK, dialect) A small eel
squinchnoun(architecture) A structure constructed between two adjacent walls to aid in the transition from a polygonal to a circular structure, as when a dome is constructed on top of a square room.
squiznoun(West Country, Commonwealth, Ireland) Alternative form of squizz. [(West Country, Commonwealth, Ireland, colloquial) A look.]
swithernoun(chiefly Scotland, Northern England) A state of indecision or confusion; a panicked state; a flap, fluster, or dither.
blinknounThe act of quickly closing both eyes and opening them again.
swearverb(ambitransitive) To use offensive, profane, or obscene language.
squidgenoun(informal) A tight space; squeeze.
scriggleverb(UK, dialect) To squirm, wriggle or squiggle.
squopverb(tiddlywinks) To play a wink so that it comes to rest vertically above some or all parts of another wink.
swattleverb(British, Northern dialect) To splutter; to guzzle.
swazzlenounA device to change the voice to make it more raspy, used in Punch and Judy performances
sneernounA facial expression where one slightly raises one corner of the upper lip, generally indicating scorn.
scroonchverbto scrunch
sweemnoun(UK dialectal) A swoon, fainting; a state of giddiness or faintness.
slocknoun(US prison slang) An improvised weapon consisting of a padlock placed in a sock, common in prison environments.

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