Anagrams of speak
Word speak has
4 exact anagrams and 62 other words
that can be made by using the letters of speak.
- spake
-
verb,
a simple past tense of speak.
- peaks
-
noun,
the pointed top of a mountain or ridge.
- Pakse
-
noun,
a city in S Laos, on the Mekong River.
- 30-30
-
- esp.
-
- spae
-
verb (used with object),
to prophesy; foretell; predict.
- skep
-
noun,
a round farm basket of wicker or wood.
- sake
-
noun,
cause, account, interest, or benefit:
- peak
-
noun,
the pointed top of a mountain or ridge.
- pase
-
noun,
(in bullfighting) a maneuver by a bullfighter with the capa or muleta to gain the attention of the bull and to guide the course of its attack.
- keas
-
noun,
a large, greenish New Zealand parrot, Nestor notabilis.
- 1080
-
- APSE
-
noun,
Architecture. a semicircular or polygonal termination or recess in a building, usually vaulted and used especially at the end of a choir in a church.
- apes
-
noun,
any of a group of anthropoid primates characterized by long arms, a broad chest, and the absence of a tail, comprising the family Pongidae (great ape) which includes the chimpanzee, gorilla, and orangutan, and the family Hylobatidae (lesser ape) which includes the gibbon and siamang.
- Sp.
-
- ake
-
verb (used without object),
ache.
- pea
-
noun,
the round, edible seed of a widely cultivated plant, Pisum sativum, of the legume family.
- AES
-
noun,
any of various early forms of bronze or copper money used in ancient Rome.
Compare as2 (def 1).
- pes
-
noun,
a foot or footlike part.
- pk.
-
plural,
pack.
- pks
-
plural,
pack.
- PSA
-
- PSE
-
- ase
-
- APE
-
noun,
any of a group of anthropoid primates characterized by long arms, a broad chest, and the absence of a tail, comprising the family Pongidae (great ape) which includes the chimpanzee, gorilla, and orangutan, and the family Hylobatidae (lesser ape) which includes the gibbon and siamang.
- SAE
-
- ae.
-
- SAP
-
noun,
the juice or vital circulating fluid of a plant, especially of a woody plant.
- se-
-
- sea
-
noun,
the salt waters that cover the greater part of the earth's surface.
- Sep
-
noun,
Simplified Employee Pension: a tax-deferred pension plan for companies with 25 or fewer employees or for self-employed persons, in which an IRA is funded by employer and employee contributions.
- ska
-
noun,
a modern style of vocalized Jamaican popular music, which emerged in the 1950s as a blend of African-Jamaican folk music, calypso, and American rhythm and blues, notable for its shuffling, scratchlike tempo and jazzlike horn riffs on the offbeat.
- ap-
-
- SPA
-
noun,
a mineral spring, or a locality in which such springs exist.
- ASK
-
noun,
the first man, made by the gods from an ash tree.
- PAS
-
noun,
a step or series of steps in ballet.
- PAK
-
noun,
pack; package.
- Ep.
-
- EPS
-
- ESA
-
- Esk
-
- Ps.
-
- EAS
-
noun,
the Akkadian god of wisdom, the son of Apsu and father of Marduk: the counterpart of Enki.
- ea.
-
- EPA
-
- ka-
-
- Kas
-
noun,
(in the Netherlands and in Dutch colonies) a large cabinet of the 17th and 18th centuries, having two doors and often a number of drawers at the bottom, and usually having an elaborately painted or carved decoration with a heavy cornice.
- Kea
-
noun,
a large, greenish New Zealand parrot, Nestor notabilis.
- APS
-
- ASP
-
noun,
any of several venomous snakes, especially the Egyptian cobra or the horned viper.
- Pa.
-
- sk
-
- A.
-
noun,
Agnolo (di Cosimo di Mariano) [ah-nyaw-law dee kaw-zee-maw dee mah-ryah-naw] /ˈɑ nyɔ lɔ di ˈkɔ zi mɔ di mɑˈryɑ nɔ/ (Show IPA), 1502–72, Italian painter.
- E.
-
noun,
Edward (St. John) 1925–2000, U.S. writer and illustrator.
- K.
-
- SA
-
- S.
-
- KP
-
- K2
-
noun,
Also called Godwin Austen [god-win aw-stin] /ˈgɒd wɪn ˈɔ stɪn/ (Show IPA), Dapsang [duh p-suhng] /dəpˈsʌŋ/ (Show IPA). a mountain in N Kashmir, in the Karakoram range: second highest peak in the world. 28,250 feet (8611 meters).
- AK
-
- PE
-
noun,
the 17th letter of the Hebrew alphabet.
- P.
-
noun,
Paul (Johann von) [poul yoh-hahn fuh n] /paʊl ˈyoʊ hɑn fən/ (Show IPA), 1830–1914, German playwright, novelist, poet, and short-story writer: Nobel Prize 1910.