Top 10 similar words or synonyms for tife

timn    0.892864

zrmn    0.879528

mgni    0.878126

zrni    0.867230

cuznsi    0.863171

mnni    0.862073

alnb    0.855323

coniga    0.843610

tivcr    0.839918

aucuzn    0.833742

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for tife

Article Example
Ramón Ormazábal Ramón Ormazábal Tife was born in Irun, Gipuzkoa, in 1910.
Ramón Ormazábal Ramón Ormazábal Tife (1910 – 5 July 1982) was a Basque communist politician who was a founding member and leader of the Communist Party of the Basque Country ("Euskadiko Partidu Komunista", EPK).
Now Take My Wife It starred Sheila Hancock and Donald Houston as a suburban middle-class couple, Claire and Harry Love. He would start each episode by turning to the camera and saying "Now ... take my wife" (except for one episode where they were supposed to be very drunk when he said "Now wake my tife").
Delo Serbo Dello Sebro is bordered to the North by Abursha Dineshie, East by Amolicho Lalu, Southeast by Tife Doda, Southwest by Ajjamsa, and to the West by Jafera Hulluqqo villages. The Werrangabbo River, which is called the Gololcha in its lower course, passes to the Northeast and serves as a boundary between Dello Sebroo, Jafera Hulluqqo and Abursha Dineshie. Werrangabbo was the main source of drinking water for local people before 1997, but today it is used for cattle during the dry seasons.
Take It From Here Take It From Here (often referred to as TIFH, pronounced — and sometimes humorously spelt — "TIFE") is a British radio comedy programme broadcast by the BBC between 1948 and 1960. It was written by Frank Muir and Denis Norden, and starred Jimmy Edwards, Dick Bentley and Joy Nichols. When Nichols moved to New York City in 1953, she was replaced by June Whitfield and Alma Cogan. The show is perhaps most famous for introducing "The Glums". Through "TIFH" Muir and Norden reinvented British post-war radio comedy — amongst other influences, it was one of the first shows with a significant segment consisting of parody of film and book styles, later used extensively in programmes such as "Round the Horne" and many television programmes.