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Showing words for JERRY using the English dictionary
5 Letter Words for Jerry
3 Letter Words for Jerry
Definitions for Jerry
[1] of inferior materials or workmanship.
[2] a chamber pot.
[3] a male given name, form of Gerald, Gerard, Jeremiah, and Jerome.
[4] a female given name, form of Geraldine.
[5] a German, especially a German soldier.
[6] Germans collectively.
[7] Benjamin, 1738–1820, U.S. painter, in England after 1763.
[8] Jerome Alan Jerry , born 1938, U.S. basketball player, coach, and executive.
[9] Mae, 1892?–1980, U.S. actress.
[10] Nathanael Nathan Wallenstein Weinstein , 1902?–40, U.S. novelist.
[11] Paul, born 1930, U.S. poet, essayist, and novelist, born in England.
[12] Dame Rebecca Cicily Isabel Fairfield Andrews , 1892–1983, English novelist, journalist, and critic, born in Ireland.
[13] Charles Brock·den [brok -duh n] /ˈbrɒk dən/ , 1771–1810, U.S. novelist.
[14] Clifford Brownie , 1930–56, U.S. jazz trumpeter.
[15] Edmund Gerald, Jr. Jerry , born 1938, U.S. politician: governor of California 1975–83.
[16] Herbert Charles, 1912–2004, U.S. chemist, born in England: Nobel Prize 1979.
[17] James Nathaniel Jimmy , born 1936, U.S. football player and actor.
[18] John Old Brown of Osawatomie , 1800–59, U.S. abolitionist: leader of the attack at Harpers Ferry, where he was captured, tried for treason, and hanged.
[19] Margaret Wise, 1910–52, U.S. author noted for early-childhood books.
[20] Olympia, 1835–1926, U.S. women's-rights activist and Universalist minister: first American woman ordained by a major church.
[21] Robert, 1773–1858, Scottish botanist.
[22] Jerome John Jerry , 1942–95, U.S. rock guitarist, singer, and songwriter.
[23] British an informal word for chamber pot
[24] short for jeroboam
[25] a German, esp a German soldier
[26] the Germans collectively Jerry didn't send his bombers out last night
[27] any of various colours, such as those of wood or earth, produced by low intensity light in the wavelength range 620–585 nanometres
[28] a dye or pigment producing these colours
[29] brown cloth or clothing dressed in brown
[30] any of numerous mostly reddish-brown butterflies of the genera Maniola, Lasiommata , etc, such as M. jurtina (meadow brown ): family Satyridae
[31] of the colour brown
[32] (of bread) made from a flour that has not been bleached or bolted, such as wheatmeal or wholemeal flour
[33] deeply tanned or sunburnt
[34] to make (esp food as a result of cooking) brown or (esp of food) to become brown
[35] Sir Arthur Whitten (ˈwɪt ə n). 1886–1948, British aviator who with J.W. Alcock made the first flight across the Atlantic (1919)
[36] Ford Madox . 1821–93, British painter, associated with the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood. His paintings include The Last of England (1865) and Work (1865)
[37] George (Alfred ), Lord George-Brown. 1914–85, British Labour politician; vice-chairman and deputy leader of the Labour party (1960–70); foreign secretary 1966–68
[38] George Mackay . 1921–96, Scottish poet, novelist, and short-story writer. His works, which include the novels Greenvoe (1972) and Magnus (1973), reflect the history and culture of Orkney
[39] (James ) Gordon . born 1951, British Labour politician; Chancellor of the Exchequer (1997–2007); prime minister (2007–10)
[40] Herbert Charles . 1912–2004, US chemist, who worked on the compounds of boron. Nobel prize for chemistry 1979
[41] James . 1933–2006, US soul singer and songwriter, noted for his dynamic stage performances and for his commitment to Black rights
[42] John . 1800–59, US abolitionist leader, hanged after leading an unsuccessful rebellion of slaves at Harper's Ferry, Virginia
[43] Lancelot , called Capability Brown . 1716–83, British landscape gardener
[44] Michael (Stuart ). born 1941, US physician: shared the Nobel prize for physiology or medicine (1985) for work on cholesterol
[45] Robert . 1773–1858, Scottish botanist who was the first to observe the Brownian movement in fluids
[46] one of the four cardinal points of the compass, 270° clockwise from north and 180° from east
[47] the direction along a parallel towards the sunset, at 270° clockwise from north
[48] the west (often capital) any area lying in or towards the west Related adjectives: Hesperian, Occidental
[49] cards (usually capital) the player or position at the table corresponding to west on the compass
[50] situated in, moving towards, or facing the west
[51] (esp of the wind) from the west
[52] in, to, or towards the west
[53] archaic (of the wind) from the west
[54] go west informal to be lost or destroyed irrevocably to die
[55] the western part of the world contrasted historically and culturally with the East or Orient; the Occident
[56] (formerly) the non-Communist countries of Europe and America contrasted with the Communist states of the East Compare East (def. 2)
[57] (in the US) that part of the US lying approximately to the west of the Mississippi (during the Colonial period) the region outside the 13 colonies, lying mainly to the west of the Alleghenies
[58] (in the ancient and medieval world) the Western Roman Empire and, later, the Holy Roman Empire
[59] of or denoting the western part of a specified country, area, etc (as part of a name ) the West Coast
[60] Benjamin. 1738–1820, US painter, in England from 1763
[61] Kanye , born 1977, US rap singer and producer; his albums include The College Dropout (2004) and Graduation (2007)
[62] Mae. 1892–1980, US film actress
[63] Nathanael, real name Nathan Weinstein. 1903–40, US novelist: author of Miss Lonely-Hearts (1933) and The Day of the Locust (1939)
[64] Dame Rebecca, real name Cicily Isabel Andrews (née Fairfield ). 1892–1983, British journalist, novelist, and critic
Words related to Jerry
chamber, bedpan, jordan, pisspot, potty
Words nearby Jerry
jerne, jeroboam, jerold, jerome, jerreed, jerry, jerry can, jerry-build, jerry-built, jerry-rig, jersey
Origin of Jerry
2First recorded in 1910–15; Ger(man) + -y1
Other words from Jerry
an·ti-West , adjective
pro-West , adjective
Word origin for Jerry
westOld English; related to Old Norse vestr, Sanskrit avástāt, Latin vesper evening, Greek hésperos