Top 10 similar words or synonyms for geezil

bickwell    0.611155

nedell    0.603011

spartels    0.583441

rudley    0.583427

judels    0.579334

edeson    0.577795

myhers    0.574785

peple    0.574398

burtwell    0.573656

semels    0.570589

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for geezil

Article Example
Geezil Minerve Minerve was raised in Florida and began playing music at age 12. He played with Ida Cox early in his career, then worked as a freelance musician in New Orleans. Following stints with Clarence Love and Ernie Fields, Minerve served in the Army from 1943–46, then returned to play with Fields for a short time. He worked with Buddy Johnson from 1949-1957, then with Mercer Ellington (1960), Ray Charles (1962–64), and Arthur Prysock. In 1971 he joined the Duke Ellington Orchestra, filling Johnny Hodges's spot after Hodges's death. Minerve remained with the Ellington Orchestra until 1974, then returned to play with Mercer Ellington. He did further freelance work later in the 1970s.
Geezil Minerve Harold "Geezil" Minerve (January 3, 1922 - June 4, 1992) was a Cuban-born jazz alto saxophonist and flautist.
George W. Geezil Geezil is a tall, bald, gangly man dressed all in black, wearing a black derby hat. He wears glasses, and most distinctively, a long, wild, tangly black beard. He often talks in a choppy, disjointed and flustered manner "Did you asking me? / Could I have stood it?"
George W. Geezil Geezil made his first appearance in the strips in 1932, as an unnamed patron in Roughhouse's cafe. He re-appeared in 1933 as a Russian accented cobbler (later pawn shop owner) and regular customer of Roughhouse who held a dislike for J. Wellington Wimpy, although until his fifth appearance he went unnamed.
George W. Geezil Geezil made a handful of appearances in the "Popeye" cartoons, including "A Clean Shaven Man" (1936, nonspeaking role), "Olive's Boithday Presink" (1941), and "Wimpy the Moocher" (1960).