Associations to the word «Barry»
Noun
- Lyndon
- Glamorgan
- Beckett
- Larkin
- Redmond
- Mcguire
- Hawkins
- Lett
- Cynthia
- Mckenzie
- Gareth
- Sanders
- Mann
- Goldberg
- Ellie
- Wally
- Flanagan
- Mcgee
- Walters
- Greenwich
- Ric
- Farrell
- Commoner
- Horne
- Edna
- Zoom
- Alvarez
- Fitzgerald
- Sadler
- Cardiff
- Morse
- Sullivan
- Allen
- Sloane
- Gifford
- Cork
- Graeme
- Bingham
- Marion
- Dustin
- Len
- Hines
- Jeff
- Carole
- Murphy
- Maurice
- Snooker
- Flair
- Sinatra
- Vale
- Keane
- Flash
- Feldman
- Rubin
- Trombone
- Mackay
- Kelley
- Shaun
- Bond
- Gerry
- Cornwall
- Schwartz
- Keyboardist
- Ridley
- Shortstop
- Brent
- Robson
- Briggs
- Downing
- Dave
- Byrne
- Sable
- Kevin
- Duane
- Robin
- Rick
- Kemp
- Lynch
- Curt
- Garret
- Fry
- Lenny
- Commodore
- Bart
- Keefe
- Barnet
- Mandy
- Gerald
- Xv
- Sparks
- Siegel
- Wexford
- Blanchard
- Ferguson
- Daly
- Cisco
- Neil
Adjective
Wiktionary
BARRY, proper noun. A male given name, sometimes also used as a diminutive of Bartholomew.
BARRY, proper noun. A surname derived from the given name, or from place names in Scotland and Wales.
BARRY, proper noun. Any of a number of places, including a coastal town near Cardiff in Wales, United Kingdom.
BARRY, noun. (heraldry) A field divided transversely into several equal parts, and consisting of two different tinctures interchangeably disposed.
BARRY BOY, noun. (slang) (British) A person denoted by their poor taste in clothing and flashy cars; mainly used in the UK.
BARRY BOYS, noun. Plural of Barry boy
BARRY ISLAND, proper noun. A peninsula in the Vale of Glamorgan, in southern Wales.
Wise words
Kind words can be short and easy to speak, but their echoes
are truly endless.