Definitions Related words Phrases Mentions Easter eggs (New!)
Possible misspelling? More dictionaries have definitions for elemi -- could that be what you meant?

el lunes el martes el
Voy a la escuela el lunes, el martes, el miércoles, el jueves y el viernes.
— from A First Spanish Reader by Erwin W. (Erwin William) Roessler

everything lost everything mourned everything
She has felt everything, borne everything, experienced everything, suffered everything, lost everything, mourned everything.
— from Les Misérables by Victor Hugo

en lions en mores et
"Menêtrier and other old writers trace the origin of supporters to the usages of the tournaments, where the shields of the combatants were exposed for inspection, and guarded by their servants or pages disguised in fanciful attire: 'C'est des Tournois qu'est venu cet usage parce que les chevaliers y faisoient porter leurs lances, et leurs écus, par des pages, et des valets de pied, deguisez en ours, en lions, en mores, et en sauvages' ( Usage des Armoiries , p. 119).
— from A Complete Guide to Heraldry by Arthur Charles Fox-Davies

en los establecimientos mayores el
Pero en los establecimientos mayores el precio
— from Heath's Modern Language Series: The Spanish American Reader by Ernesto Nelson

El loco el monstruo eres
El loco, el monstruo, eres tu , pues que tu, hermano alevoso, me quieres quitar la herencia.
— from History of Spanish and Portuguese Literature (Vol 1 of 2) by Friedrich Bouterwek

everso little everso much everso
The phrase ever so , (which ought, I think, to be written as one word ,) is now a very common expression to signify in whatsoever degree ; as, " everso little,"—" everso much,"—" everso wise,"—" everso wisely."
— from The Grammar of English Grammars by Goold Brown

en larmes et M Eyssette
La situation n’était pas gaie, je voyais déjà le foyer singulièrement compromis, ma mère en larmes, et M. Eyssette bien en colère.
— from Le Petit Chose (Histoire d'un Enfant) by Alphonse Daudet

Each look each movement every
Each look, each movement, every word and tone, Should tell your patient you are all his own; Not the mere artist, purchased to attend, But the warm, ready, self-forgetting friend, Whose genial visit in itself combines The best of cordials, tonics, anodynes.
— from The Poetical Works of Oliver Wendell Holmes — Complete by Oliver Wendell Holmes

estado latente es multiforme en
Zupay, maestro, da sus lecciones a la bruja, su discípula, en su escuela tenebrosa, la Salamanca.... Zupay, universal y ubicuo en su estado latente, es multiforme en sus personificaciones y manifestaciones.
— from Argentina, Legend and History by Lucio Vicente López

electric lights extra maids extra
There were extra electric lights, extra maids, extra everything; and on the morning of Wednesday, the twenty-fifth of October, there arrived a whole squad of caterers from Boston with cases large as trunks filled with pattie shells, a thousand tiny brown pyramids of potato croquettes, tanksful of mushrooms, crab meat, and sweet-breads, cratesful of Malaga grapes and actual strawberries imported from somewhere which they dipped in white fondant and then set away to cool in little frilled paper holders, all over the butler's pantry.
— from Bobbie, General Manager: A Novel by Olive Higgins Prouty

every look every motion every
Marie Antoinette had been reared in all the freedom of the Austrian court, and it was some time before she could habituate herself to the etiquette-laden atmosphere of Versailles, where every look, every motion, every gesture, were governed alike by the inexorable rules of la grande politesse , laid down with such precision and exactitude by King Louis XIV.
— from The Girls' Book of Famous Queens by Lydia Hoyt Farmer

Every look every movement every
Every look, every movement, every expression that shot rapidly over her varying face, as quickly as the ripples on water under the hot noonday sunlight, spoke more plainly than words her intense longing.
— from The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 04, No. 24, October, 1859 A Magazine of Literature, Art, and Politics by Various


This tab, called Hiding in Plain Sight, shows you passages from notable books where your word is accidentally (or perhaps deliberately?) spelled out by the first letters of consecutive words. Why would you care to know such a thing? It's not entirely clear to us, either, but it's fun to explore! What's the longest hidden word you can find? Where is your name hiding?



Home   Reverse Dictionary / Thesaurus   Datamuse   Word games   Spruce   Feedback   Dark mode   Random word   Help


Color thesaurus

Use OneLook to find colors for words and words for colors

See an example

Literary notes

Use OneLook to learn how words are used by great writers

See an example

Word games

Try our innovative vocabulary games

Play Now

Read the latest OneLook newsletter issue: Compound Your Joy