➠ Words with o

List contains 176857 Words that "o" contain.

  • - Literary device employed by O Henry
  • - Pretense of ignorance
  • - press for it? why? satirical use of words will suffice
  • - Some memoir on Yeltsin as a form of satire
  • - "Hippopotomonstrosesquippedaliophobia" being the fear of long words, e.g.
  • - A flight attendant scared of heights, e.g.
  • - focus of an alanis morissette song
  • - Figure of speech in which the literal meaning is the opposite of that intended
  • - Unexpected twist, like in O. Henry stories
  • - Satirical use of words
  • - ... of the situation (dramatic twist)
  • - smooth, yet to be ascertained form of wit
  • - ... of the situation
  • - "The ... of the situation..." (humorist's line)
  • - Opposite of meaning intended
  • - What cheating in an ethics class is an example of
  • - Device of the wryly humorous
  • - Twist of fate
  • - O. Henry forte
  • - Type of wit
  • - Subject of an Alanis Morissette tune
  • - O. Henry's forte
  • - O. Henry trademark
  • - O. Henry technique
  • - Writing device, of a sort
  • - Use of words to convey the opposite of what they normally mean
  • - Twist of a sort
  • - Sense of the absurd
  • - Sardonic form of humor
  • - Sarcasm of a sort
  • - O. Henry's pet device
  • - O. Henry's favorite device
  • - O. Henry could see it in things
  • - Literary device much used by O. Henry
  • - Literary device in "The Gift of the Magi"
  • - Forte of O. Henry
  • - Form of sarcasm, e.g.
  • - Figure of speech employed in ridicule.
  • - Feature of many fables
  • - Dramatic ...... (type of literary twist)
  • - Dissimulation of a sort
  • - All Time Low "The ...... of Choking on a Lifesaver"
  • - A form of wry humor.
  • - "The Wizard of Oz" device
  • - "The Gift of the Magi" quality
  • - "The gaiety of reflection and the joy of wisdom," per Anatole France
  • - Wit of a sort
  • - Swift's forte.
  • - O. Henry hallmark
  • - Literary effect in O. Henry's 'The Gift of the Magi'
  • - Literary twist of sorts
  • - Antonym of "earnestness"
  • - O. Henry specialty
  • - O. Henry's specialty
  • - Twist in O. Henry stories
  • - Twist from O. Henry
  • - O. Henry device
  • - Stephen Colbert forte
  • - Type of twisted wit
  • - "The Gift of the Magi" device
  • - "The Gift of the Magi" plot device
  • - Particular use of language in club secretary's conclusion
  • - O. Henry twist
  • - 'The Gift of the Magi' feature
  • - O. Henry-esque twist
  • - O. Henry literary device
  • - "Gift of the Magi" device
  • - Slice of wry?
  • - Apt twist of fate, in literature
  • - Kind of writing
  • - Mockery, of a sort
  • - Form of humour
  • - Humorous literary twist
  • - "Honesty with the volume cranked up," per George Saunders
  • - Doctor going to work sick, e.g.
  • - metal unknown – that's the paradox
  • - Drama's incongruity
  • - sarcasm from the yankee at the golf club
  • - Might Smithy work with this wry literary device?
  • - sarcasm unknown to press at first
  • - Subtle humour cryptically "Fey"?
  • - Subtle humour fey perhaps?
  • - "oh, the ......!"
  • - twist ending feature, sometimes
  • - story twist
  • - sarcasm in press? unknown
  • - a ballerina stumbling on the sidewalk, e.g.
  • - Press gallery's close to mocking literary style
  • - Complaining about social media on Facebook, say
  • - a billionaire not having change for the parking meter, e.g.
  • - humour with a twist
  • - Dramatic ... (literary device in which something unexpected occurs)
  • - Tongue-in-cheek literary twist
  • - Rhetorical literary device
  • - much-debated literary device
  • - Literary technique that involves incongruous elements
  • - Muted - or refined - sarcasm
  • - oft-debated literary device
  • - Dramatic ... (wry literary twist)
  • - The fact that the Bible is the most shoplifted book in America, e.g.
  • - Sarcasm from the club youth leader
  • - dramatic literary device
  • - dry humour
  • - Clever sarcasm
  • - Novelist's device
  • - Satirist's device
  • - Subtle sarcasm
  • - Sardonic literary style
  • - Satiric twist
  • - Literary sarcasm
  • - What air quotes sometimes indicate
  • - Tongue-in-cheek quality
  • - The fire station burned down, e.g.
  • - Sardonic writing
  • - It features a twist
  • - Humorous literary technique
  • - Double-edged humor
  • - "Hipster Handbook" subject
  • - Swiftian humor
  • - Swift strength
  • - Stinging surprise
  • - Satirist's tool
  • - Sardonic wit
  • - Sardonic literary tactic
  • - Sardonic literary device
  • - Sardonic humor
  • - Like hematite
  • - Light sarcasm
  • - It may be dramatic
  • - Humor with a twist, perhaps
  • - Biting wit
  • - A literary incongruity
  • - "Gulliver's Travels" feature
  • - Writing device
  • - Vonnegut device
  • - Twist onstage
  • - Twist in "Oliver Twist"
  • - Twist at the end
  • - Swiftian device
  • - Swift device
  • - Speaker's device
  • - Sophocles skill
  • - Socratic approach
  • - Socratic ...... (pretended ignorance)
  • - Socratic ...... (feigned ignorance in a discussion)
  • - Satiric wit
  • - Satire, perhaps
  • - Sardonic style
  • - Sardonic humor, e.g.
  • - Sarcasm, e.g.
  • - Quality that Alanis didn't quite hit in a hit song
  • - Poetic justice
  • - Parking enforcement vehicle getting towed, e.g.
  • - Paradoxical sarcasm
  • - Overused humor technique
  • - Onion ingredient?
  • - Nonliteral humor
  • - Much-misunderstood writing
  • - Man bites dog, e.g.
  • - Literary twist that might be "dramatic"
  • - Literary technique involving incongruity
  • - Literary incongruity
  • - It's not to be taken literally
  • - It's lost on some people
  • - It may feature a twist
  • - It can feature a twist
  • - Incongruousness
  • - Humorist's tool
  • - Humor not for dummies
  • - Hipster's sartorial tool
  • - Hidden humor
  • - Gentle sarcasm
  • - Ferruginous
  • - Employment agency layoff, e.g.
  • - Double-edged plot device
  • - Device commonly used in "The Twilight Zone"
  • - Certain literary device
  • - Asteism
  • - Alkaline Trio "Agony & ......"
  • - Adolph Coors III's allergy to beer, e.g.
  • - "The Twilight Zone" plot device
  • - "Oedipus Rex" literary device
  • - Ferric ......
  • - Literary element
  • - Ferrous
  • - Certain humor
  • - Dry humor
  • - Wry humor
  • - Unexpected outcome
  • - A fire station burning down, e.g
  • - Dramatic device from smooth Yankee
  • - It can be dramatic or situational
  • - Sarcastic tone
  • - Dramatic technique
  • - Plagiarizing an essay about integrity, for example
  • - Ungenuine tone
  • - It's twisty
  • - Cop committing a crime, e.g
  • - "Seinfeld" humor type
  • - Wry twist
  • - A car thief's car getting stolen, e.g
  • - Jonathan Swift specialty
  • - Smooth youth leader in satire
  • - Mild sarcasm
  • - Humor with a twist
  • - Cheating on an ethics exam, e.g
  • - Device common on 'Seinfeld'
  • - Satire device
  • - Spelling mistake on a spelling bee trophy, e.g
  • - Sometimes tricky-to-spot humor
  • - IRS agent committing tax fraud, e.g
  • - Swift specialty
  • - Swift quality
  • - Dry wit
  • - Wry twisting
  • - Single-story elevator factory, say
  • - It has a twist
  • - Two-sided humor
  • - It involves a twist
  • - Humour from smooth youth leader
  • - Subtle humour
  • - Wry literary twist
  • - Twisted wit
  • - Vonnegut literary device
  • - Tongue-in-cheek humor
  • - Often-missed humor
  • - Satire; sarcasm
  • - Writing with a wry twist
  • - Twist in a tale
  • - Plot twist
  • - Jane Austen specialty
  • - Twisted humor
  • - Writing style with a twist?
  • - Twist ending feature
  • - Word from the Greek for 'feigned ignorance'
  • - Satire feature
  • - Satirist's literary device
  • - Robbery at a police station, e.g
  • - Subtle twist
  • - Choking on a Life Saver, e.g
  • - First person caught leaving intimate, insincere statements
  • - Double-edged literary device
  • - 'The Twilight Zone' plot device, often
  • - Subtle twist, in literature
  • - Literary technique
  • - Satire
  • - Writing that features a twist
  • - Twisty writing?
  • - Firehouse catching fire, e.g
  • - It's not what you'd expect
  • - Humor element
  • - In theory, drops the sarcasm
  • - Subtle humor
  • - Literary twist using opposites
  • - Common literary device
  • - Subtle satire
  • - Dissimulation
  • - Satirist's specialty
  • - It may be poetic
  • - Caustic remark
  • - Dramatic
  • - Literary surprise
  • - Literary Twist
  • - ...... paradox
  • - Bitter humor?
  • - Literary device
  • - Wit
  • - Sarcasm
owe
  • - Attribute (to)
  • - Need to pay
  • - Have yet to pay
  • - Be indebted to
  • - Not be up to date on bills
  • - Be in hock to
  • - Be obliged to
  • - Be attributable (to)
  • - Be obligated to
  • - Need to deal with payback
  • - Have bills to pay
  • - Have to pay back
  • - Have yet to settle
  • - Fail to keep up
  • - Have a duty to pay
  • - Be liable to
  • - Be beholden (to)
  • - Be in debt to
  • - Need to repay
  • - With 5 Down, be behind, as a tenant
  • - Have to remit
  • - Have yet to settle up
  • - Have yet to pony up
  • - Have to repay
  • - Be obliged to pay
  • - Have debts to pay
  • - "... I ......, so off to work I go"
  • - have to thank
  • - We start with nothing and get into debt
  • - To what do I ...the honor?
  • - obliged to pay nothing to us subjects
  • - be under an obligation to pay for lawn-mower partially
  • - nothing you and i fail to settle
  • - obliged to pay when in power
  • - be a tad short with?
  • - Rhyme for "though"
  • - 'How much do I --?'
  • - Take credit?
  • - Incur
  • - Have a loan from
  • - Must give
  • - Put off paying
  • - Part of i.o.u.
  • - In debt
  • - Run up bills
  • - Use credit cards
  • - Chalk up
  • - Fall short.
  • - Didn't pay yet
  • - Must pay
  • - Must repay
  • - Is obliged
  • - In the Red?
  • - Be in the red
  • - Carry a balance
  • - Open a tab for some miracle workers doing a turn
  • - Run a tab, say
  • - Have unpaid bills
  • - Have bills
  • - Be indebted
  • - The O in IOU
  • - Word that sounds like its first letter
  • - Have debts
  • - Fall behind in bills
  • - 'I ...... You Nothing' (Seinabo Sey song)
  • - Be behind on bills
  • - Have a debt
  • - Be in debt
  • - Be shy financially
  • - ...... a debt of gratitude
  • - Pile up debt
  • - Red state verb
  • - Be short
  • - Be behind, in a way
  • - Be in arrears
  • - Fall behind, say
  • - Be obligated
  • - Be shy
  • - Verb that sounds like a vowel
  • - Have creditors
  • - Be in the hole
  • - Be beholden
  • - Part of IOU
  • - 'You ...... me one'
  • - Have outstanding accounts
  • - Verb in IOU
  • - Have a mortgage, e.g
  • - Have debtors
  • - Be behind financially
  • - Have chits out
  • - Carry a balance of
  • - Be short, in a way
  • - Have markers out
  • - Be behind
  • - Have overdue bills
  • - Be shy, in a way
  • - Concede authority when undressed
  • - Have a tab
  • - Get a Venmo request, say
  • - Have student loans, say
  • - Fall behind
  • - Be outstanding?
  • - Have obligations
  • - Carry a mortgage, say
  • - Haven't yet paid
  • - IOU verb
  • - Be shy, say
  • - Be shy, monetarily
  • - Run up a tab
  • - Have unsettled accounts
  • - Have tab in Padstow eatery
  • - What debtors do
  • - Have an unbalanced balance
  • - Acquire debt
  • - 'I .... you!'
  • - See red
  • - Attribute
  • - Come up short
  • - Generate interest
  • - Get behind
  • - Not be square, say
  • - 26 I ___ you a debt of gratitude
  • - Runs a tab
  • - Have credit card charges
  • - Have a balance that's simply outstanding
  • - Have a balance due on a credit card
  • - what those who haven't settled do
  • - Be awash in red ink
  • - How much do we ... you? [What's the damage]
  • - The "o" of i.o.u.
  • - Have some debts