Wave
11wave — [n] sea surf, current bending, billow, breaker, coil, comber, convolution, corkscrew, crest, crush, curl, curlicue, drift, flood, foam, ground swell, gush, heave, influx, loop, movement, outbreak, rash, ridge, ripple, rippling, rocking, roll,… …
12wave — index beat (pulsate), brandish, display, flaunt, fluctuate Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …
13Wave — [englisch, weɪv; wörtlich »Welle«], Dateiformat von Klangdateien unter der grafischen Benutzeroberfläche Windows für IBM bzw. IBM kompatible Computer. Siehe auch: Sampling …
14Wave — informal a woman who is a member of a US navy ↑volunteer group …
15wave — vb *swing, flourish, brandish, shake, thrash Analogous words: wield, swing, manipulate, *handle, ply: undulate, sway, *swing, fluctuate: *shake, quiver, quaver …
16wave — see waive …
17wave — ► VERB 1) move one s hand to and fro in greeting or as a signal. 2) move (one s hand or arm, or something held in one s hand) to and fro. 3) move to and fro with a swaying motion while remaining fixed to one point. 4) style (hair) so that it… …
18Wave — [wāv] n. a member of the WAVES …
19Wave — A wave is a disturbance that propagates through space and time, usually with transference of energy. While a mechanical wave exists in a medium (which on deformation is capable of producing elastic restoring forces), waves of electromagnetic… …
20WAVE (TV) — For other meanings, see wave (disambiguation). WAVE Louisville, Kentucky Branding WAVE 3 (general) WAVE 3 News (newscasts) Slogan Working For You …