angler |
a person who fishes with hook and line, usu. for sport. [3 definitions] |
Angler fish |
any of various deepwater marine fishes that have a large mouth over which dangles a wormlike appendage that lures prey. |
Angles |
a people from the lowlands of northern Germany who migrated to eastern England in the fifth century. |
angleworm |
a worm used as bait in fishing, esp. an earthworm. |
Anglican |
of or pertaining to the Church of England or churches of the same origin and communion. [2 definitions] |
Anglicism |
(often l.c.) a word, idiom, or feature of the English language, esp. British English, borrowed by another language; Briticism. [2 definitions] |
Anglicize |
(often l.c.) to change or conform to that which is English in style, manner, pronunciation, or the like. |
Anglify |
to Anglicize. |
angling |
the act, process, or sport of fishing with hook and line. |
Anglo |
a white American not of Hispanic descent. |
Anglo- |
English. [2 definitions] |
Anglo-American |
of, pertaining to, or involving both England and America or English and American people. [2 definitions] |
Anglomania |
a greatly exaggerated attachment to or imitation of English manners, habits, institutions, and the like. |
Anglophile |
one who is a great admirer of England and of most things that are English. |
Anglophobe |
one who strongly dislikes or fears England and most things that are English. |
Anglo-Saxon |
a person of Germanic descent who lived in England before the Norman Conquest, or a descendant thereof. [5 definitions] |
Angola |
a country on the western coast of Africa, bordered by the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Zambia, and Namibia. |
Angora |
(often l.c.) the hair of the Angora rabbit or Angora goat. [4 definitions] |
angostura bark |
the bitter, strong-smelling bark of either of two South American rue trees, used in medicine and as a flavoring in bitters. |
angry |
feeling or showing anger (often fol. by "at," "with," or "about"). [3 definitions] |
angst |
a feeling of dread, anxiety, or anguish. |