Reverse Dictionary: RECITE

ADJECTIVES
1635 — WELL-BREATHED able to recite or speak for a long time without tiring → obs.

NOUNS
1320 — SAW a story, tale, recital → obs.
1325 — MINNING recitation from memory → obs.
1651 — PATERNOSTER a tedious recital or utterance, esp. a nonsensical or officious one → obs.
1766 — SCRIFT a recitation; a long-winded story; a written composition; a made-up tale; a falsehood → Sc. obs.
1820 — MELOLOGUE a recitation which is partly sung and partly spoken
1827 — DEAD a complete failure in recitation → US students’ sl.
1846 — FIZZLE a failure in recitation or examination → US students’ sl.
1850 — BLOOD a perfect recitation → US students’ sl.
1851 — BLUE FIZZLE a very bad recitation → US students’ sl.
1864 — CANTILLATION chanting, intoning, musical recitation

NOUNS – PERSON
1522 — PATTERER a person who recites or mechanically repeats prayers, lessons, etc. → obs.
1775 — RECITANT a person who recites

VERBS
..888 — YED to sing, to recite, to talk, to discourse → obs.
1380 — RENDER to recite or repeat something previously learned → obs.
1400 — NAIT to go over, to recite, to repeat → obs.
1500 — PITTER-PATTER to recite prayers, etc. mechanically → obs.
1531 — PATTER to repeat or recite in a rapid, mechanical, or indistinct manner
1549 — PITTLE-PATTLE to recite prayers mechanically → obs.
1568 — RECITATE to recite; to narrate
1575 — BESPOUT to recite or utter with pompous elocution
1594 — DECLINE to say or recite formally or in definite order → obs.
1631 — TROLL to recite in a full rolling voice
1703 — RAME to repeat, to recite, to declaim → Sc.
1710 — THRUM to recite or tell in a monotonous or sing-song way
1776 — HAVE A STORY OFF PAT to be able to recite or perform readily and faultlessly from memory
1782 — GALLOP OVER to hurry over in reading or reciting; to read cursorily
1795 — INTONATE to recite in a singing voice
1826 — GALLOP THROUGH to hurry over in reading or reciting; to read cursorily
1828 — BESPOUT to recite to, to plague with oratory
1837 — DEAD of a teacher: to cause a student to fail in recitation → Amer. sl.
1843 — SCREED to talk, read, or recite rapidly and fluently; to reel off; to repeat a lying fabrication → Sc.
1847 — DEAD to make a complete failure in recitation; to be ignorant of the lesson → Amer. sl.
1847 — FIZZLE to fail in a recitation or examination → US students’ sl.
1857 — BESPOUT to utter, say, or recite with pompous elocution
1864 — CANTILLATE to chant; to recite with musical tones
1872 — REEBLE — RIBBLE to read or recite quickly; to gabble → Sc.
1900 — RIBBLE OFF to recite quickly, by rote; to speak rapidly a list or series one knows well → Amer. dial.