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SUBSTITUTED |
Exchanged |
|
COUNTERCHANGED |
Exchanged. |
|
SPARRED |
Exchanged blows |
|
CONTRA |
Goods exchanged |
|
|
|
UNCONVERTED |
Not converted or exchanged. |
|
CASHED |
Cased clothing ... first hoodie exchanged |
|
EDAM |
Adam exchanged capital for English cheese |
|
STRONG |
Tough string I exchanged for nothing |
|
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|
LUNCH |
Learner exchanged first punch for meal |
|
PRANCE |
Prince I exchanged for a caper |
|
RIFTS |
Gifts initially exchanged for voucher, ultimately causing tears |
|
MEDAL |
Metal heart exchanged for gold, silver or bronze? |
|
MANGY |
Dirty mango ultimately exchanged for a piece of yam |
|
NIGHT |
A dark time when first light exchanged for nitrogen |
|
NOSINESS |
Curiosity of business that exchanged bus for short numbers |
|
LINGERED |
Lingerie that is exchanged, for news boss who delayed |
|
RAMMED |
Smashed into and raided when ID exchanged for two thousand |
|
CONVERTIBLE |
Capable of being exchanged or interchanged;
reciprocal; interchangeable. |
|
EYE FOR AN EYE |
Retaliation of a sort when agreements were exchanged, or so it sounds |
|
EXCHANGEABLE |
Capable of being exchanged; fit or proper to be
exchanged. |
|
INCOMMUTABLE |
Not commutable; not capable of being exchanged with,
or substituted for, another. |
|
CONVERTIBILITY |
The condition or quality of being convertible;
capability of being exchanged; convertibleness. |
|
WORTH |
Equal in value to; furnishing an equivalent for; proper to
be exchanged for. |
|
EXCHANGE |
The thing given or received in return; esp., a
publication exchanged for another. |
|
CHANGELING |
One who, or that which, is left or taken in the place
of another, as a child exchanged by fairies. |