Yes the word swig is grammatical in English.
It means to drink or gulp.
Some end rhymes of earwig are big, bigwig, brig, dig, fig, gig, jig, rig, pig, shindig, twig, swig, wig, and trig.
The homophone for the word "whirred" would be the word "word."
The word respectful is not a compound word.
The 5th word in "What is the 5th word in this sentence" is "the".
The base word in the word "signal" is "sign."
Shaking his head, David took another swig from the bottle.
Twig, swig...
The past tense of swig is swigged.
Melvin Swig died in 1993.
Melvin Swig was born in 1917.
Swallow, swig, swill, mouthful.
bigdigfiggigMigrigpigwigzigtwig
owed owes owls swap awls swim swig swan
Melvin M. Swig has written: 'Melvin M. Swig, President, Jewish Community Federation of San Francisco, the Peninsula, Marin and Sonoma Counties, 1971-1972' -- subject(s): Accessible book
times 2 crossword - swig
Synonyms for "swig" include "gulp," "drink," "quaff," and "sip." These terms refer to consuming a liquid, often in a hearty or casual manner. Depending on the context, "chug" or "slurp" may also be appropriate.
* big * dig * rig * gig * wig * zig ******* brig, fig, jig, pig, prig, sprig, swig, WhigFig, wig, dig, big, swig, jig, and others we canot think of at this moment-AnSwEr