| ANGLED | • angled v. Simple past tense and past participle of angle. • angled adj. Arranged so as to form an angle. • angled adj. Forming an angle of a particular type. |
| ANGLER | • angler n. A person who fishes with a hook and line. • angler n. An angler fish, Lophius piscatorius. • angler n. Someone who tries to work an angle; a person who schemes or has an ulterior motive. |
| ANGLES | • angles n. Plural of angle. • angles v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of angle. • Angles n. Plural of Angle. |
| ANGLOS | • anglos n. Plural of anglo. • Anglos n. Plural of Anglo. • ANGLO n. a white inhabitant of the US not of Latin origin. |
| BANGLE | • bangle n. A rigid bracelet or anklet, especially one with no clasp. • bangle v. (Transitive, obsolete) to beat about or beat down, as corn by the wind. • bangle v. (Obsolete or dialectal) to waste away little by little; squander carelessly; fritter (away). |
| CANGLE | • CANGLE v. (Scots) to wrangle. |
| DANGLE | • dangle v. (Intransitive) To hang loosely with the ability to swing. • dangle v. (Intransitive, slang, ice hockey, lacrosse) The action of performing a move or deke with the puck in… • dangle v. (Transitive) To hang or trail something loosely. |
| DANGLY | • dangly adj. Dangling; tending to dangle. • DANGLY adj. hanging loosely. |
| FANGLE | • fangle v. (Obsolete or dialectal) To fashion, manufacture, invent, or create. • fangle v. (Obsolete or dialectal) To trim showily; entangle; hang about. • fangle v. (Obsolete or dialectal) To waste time; trifle. |
| GANGLE | • gangle v. To move in a manner characteristic of a gangling person. • GANGLE v. to move awkwardly. |
| GANGLY | • gangly adj. Tall and thin, especially so as to cause physical awkwardness. • GANGLY adj. awkwardly tall and lanky, also GANGLING. |
| JANGLE | • jangle v. (Transitive). • jangle v. (Intransitive). • jangle n. A rattling metallic sound; a clang. |
| JANGLY | • jangly adj. Accompanied by a jangling sound. • JANGLY adj. making a jangling sound. |
| MANGLE | • mangle v. (Transitive) To change, mutilate, or disfigure by cutting, tearing, rearranging, etc. • mangle v. (Transitive, computing) To modify (an identifier from source code) so as to produce a unique identifier… • mangle n. A hand-operated device with rollers, for wringing laundry. |
| TANGLE | • tangle v. (Transitive) To mix together or intertwine. • tangle v. (Intransitive) To become mixed together or intertwined. • tangle v. (Intransitive, figurative) To enter into an argument, conflict, dispute, or fight. |
| TANGLY | • tangly adj. Entangled; intricate. • tangly adj. Covered with tangle, or seaweed. • TANGLY adj. tangled. |
| WANGLE | • wangle v. (Transitive) To obtain through deceitful or manipulative methods. • wangle v. (Transitive) To falsify, as records. • wangle v. (Intransitive) To achieve through contrivance or cajolery. |