• To perform the tasks or actions associated with (something).
• To cook.
• To travel in, to tour, to make a circuit of.
• To treat in a certain way.
• To work for or on, by way of caring for, looking after, preparing, cleaning, keeping in order, etc.
• To act or behave in a certain manner; to conduct oneself.
• To spend (time) in jail. (See also do time)
• To impersonate or depict.
• (with 'a' and the name of a person, place, event, etc.) To copy or emulate the actions or behaviour that is associated with the person or thing mentioned.
• To kill.
• To deal with for good and all; to finish up; to undo; to ruin; to do for.
• To punish for a misdemeanor.
• To have sex with. (See also do it)
• To cheat or swindle.
• To convert into a certain form; especially, to translate.
• To finish.
• To work as a domestic servant (with for).
• (auxiliary) Used to form the present progressive of verbs.
• To cash or to advance money for, as a bill or note.
• (ditransitive) To make or provide.
• To injure (one's own body part).
• To take drugs.
• (in the form be doing [somewhere]) To exist with a purpose or for a reason.
• A letter (capital Ð, small ð) introduced into Old English to represent its dental fricative, then not distinguished from the letter thorn, no longer used in English but still in modern use in Icelandic, the IPA and other phonetic alphabets to represent the voiced dental fricative "th" sound as in the English word then. The letter is also used in Faroese, but is generally silent in that language.
• daughter of George VI who became the Queen of England and Northern Ireland in 1952 on the death of her father (1926-)
• Queen of England from 1558 to 1603; daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn; she succeeded Mary I (who was a Catholic) and restored Protestantism to England; during her reign Mary Queen of Scots was executed and the Spanish Armada was defeated; her reign was marked by prosperity and literary genius (1533-1603)
• the legal status of a person who is alive but who has been deprived of the rights and privileges of a citizen or a member of society; the legal status of one sentenced to life imprisonment
• a death that results from a wrongful act or from negligence; a death that can serve as the basis for a civil action for damages on behalf of the dead person's family or heirs
Note: This list has been curated by our developer and author and fine-tuned since 2016 with manual additions, exclusions and rankings. Thousands of user contributions from rappers, singers, songwriters and poets have also been used for accuracy.