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Synonyms for worm
Grammar : Noun, verb |
Spell : wurm |
Phonetic Transcription : wɜrm |
Top 10 synonyms for worm Other synonyms for the word worm
- agonize
- allure
- approach unnoticed
- argue into
- arm-twist
- banter
- barter
- beggar
- beguile
- bend
- bezonian
- black sheep
- blackguard
- blandish
- blarney
- boor
- bounder
- brute
- bug
- bum
- butter up
- cad
- caitiff
- case
- caterpillar
- centipede
- charm
- cheat
- clown
- coax
- come on
- con
- contrive
- convulse
- court
- coward
- cower
- crawl on all fours
- creep
- cullion
- cur
- deceive
- decoy
- delude
- distort
- dodge
- dog
- drag oneself along
- draw
- edge
- engineer
- entice
- entozoon
- extricate
- extricate oneself
- fake
- falsify
- flatter
- get
- glide
- go on all fours
- go on belly
- good-for-nothing
- grovel
- gumshoe
- hang back
- heel
- hide
- honey
- hook
- hound
- importune
- inch
- induce
- infiltrate
- influence
- ingrate
- insinuate
- inveigle
- jawbone
- jerk
- jiggle
- juggle
- knave
- kowtow
- lag
- larva
- lay it on
- liar
- libertine
- loiter along
- lollygag
- looser
- louse
- lout
- lowlife
- lure
- lurk
- maggot
- maneuver
- manipulate
- miscreant
- mooch
- move at snail's pace
- move on hands and knees
- move secretly
- ne'er-do-well
- nose out
- obtain
- oil
- ooze
- outcast
- pad
- pariah
- pass
- pauper
- persuade
- pester
- pilgarlic
- plague
- plod
- poke
- poltroon
- press
- prevail upon
- prowl
- pull oneself along
- pussyfoot
- rake
- rapscallion
- rascal
- rat
- recoil
- renegade
- reprobate
- riffraff
- rogue
- ronion
- rope in
- rotter
- rounder
- scalawag
- scamp
- scapegrace
- scoundrel
- scrabble
- scramble
- scullion
- scum
- secrete
- seduce
- shift
- shimmy
- shirk
- sidle
- skew
- skulk
- skunk
- slide
- slink
- slip
- slip by
- slip past
- slither
- sly
- smuggle
- snake
- sneak
- snook
- snow
- soap
- soft-soap
- soften up
- soothe
- spirit
- spread it on
- squeeze by
- squeeze past
- squiggle
- squirm
- steal
- stinker
- struggle
- suffer
- sweet-talk
- sweeten up
- talk into
- tease
- tempt
- thrash
- thresh
- tiptoe
- toad
- toss
- turn
- twist
- twitch
- urge
- vagabond
- varlet
- villain
- wag
- waggle
- wangle
- wave
- wheedle
- wiggle
- wince
- wind
- work on
- worm
- wretch
- wriggle
- writhe
- yellow dog
- zigzag
Définition of worm
Origin :- Old English wurm, variant of wyrm "serpent, dragon," also in later Old English "earthworm," from Proto-Germanic *wurmiz (cf. Old Saxon, Old High German, German wurm, Old Frisian and Dutch worm, Old Norse ormr, Gothic waurms "serpent, worm"), from PIE *wrmi-/*wrmo- "worm" (cf. Greek rhomos, Latin vermis "worm," Old Russian vermie "insects," Lithuanian varmas "insect, gnat"), possibly from root *wer- (3) "turn" (see versus).
- The ancient category of these was much more extensive than the modern, scientific, one and included serpents, scorpions, maggots, and the supposed causes of certain diseases. For substitution of -o- for -u-, see come. As an insult meaning "abject, miserable person" it dates from Old English.
- As in cad : noun sly, dastardly person
- As in maggot : noun insect
- As in wretch : noun derelict
- As in cur : noun rotten, lowly animate being
- As in grub : noun larva
- As in sneak : verb move stealthily
- As in squirm : verb wiggle, fidget
- As in wheedle : verb talk into
- As in wiggle : verb shake back and forth
- As in wriggle : verb maneuver out of; wiggle
- As in writhe : verb contort; toss back and forth
- As in wangle : verb finagle
- As in sweet-talk : verb coax
- As in coax : verb persuade
- As in crawl : verb move very slowly
- As in creep : verb crawl along, usually on ground
- As in edge : verb defeat narrowly
- Hasn't it even dawned on you that this worm was ever going to turn?
- Extract from : « Her Father's Daughter » by Gene Stratton-Porter
- Hers were ice cold—but inside they tingled and glowed, like a worm of fire in a chrysalis of ice.
- Extract from : « The Incomplete Amorist » by E. Nesbit
- You know, I think it wrong to kill a bird, or worm, or even a Tartar.
- Extract from : « Alarms and Discursions » by G. K. Chesterton
- You must think this, look you, that the worm will do his kind.
- Extract from : « The Lyric » by John Drinkwater
- If any of the plants are eat by this worm, you must set another one by it.
- Extract from : « The History of Louisiana » by Le Page Du Pratz
- Was it that in his own eyes he was but a worm glorified with the boon of serving an angel?
- Extract from : « Heather and Snow » by George MacDonald
- The caterpillar, for example, resembles the worm which is the ancestor of the insects.
- Extract from : « The Sexual Question » by August Forel
- Has he not a faith and a sincerity which in a Worm of the Earth ought to be reckoned sublime?
- Extract from : « The Book of Khalid » by Ameen Rihani
- The worm was in the trunk, it has ascended into the fruit, and is devouring it.
- Extract from : « Doctor Pascal » by Emile Zola
- That seemed sensible, and Charley's own hook now had a worm on it, and so had Jeff's.
- Extract from : « Harper's Young People, August 10, 1880 » by Various
Antonyms for worm
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019