Levenshtein | Double Levenshtein | SoundEx | MetaPhone | Manually curated |
---|---|---|---|---|
culler (0) - 1 freq culled (1) - 3 freq cullers (1) - 1 freq cullar (1) - 1 freq caller (1) - 80 freq duller (1) - 2 freq puller (1) - 1 freq auller (1) - 1 freq fuller (1) - 3 freq cullen (1) - 16 freq guller (1) - 1 freq culter (1) - 1 freq bulder (2) - 4 freq cler (2) - 1 freq cuiver (2) - 4 freq killer (2) - 23 freq bueller (2) - 1 freq caulder (2) - 18 freq callar (2) - 4 freq ruler (2) - 10 freq bullet (2) - 32 freq bullers (2) - 2 freq dueler (2) - 1 freq dulled (2) - 1 freq cuvver (2) - 1 freq |
culler (0) - 1 freq cullar (1) - 1 freq caller (1) - 80 freq cellar (2) - 26 freq callar (2) - 4 freq cullour (2) - 6 freq cllr (2) - 3 freq culter (2) - 1 freq collier (2) - 2 freq collar (2) - 72 freq callier (2) - 1 freq cullen (2) - 16 freq puller (2) - 1 freq cullers (2) - 1 freq duller (2) - 2 freq auller (2) - 1 freq culled (2) - 3 freq fuller (2) - 3 freq guller (2) - 1 freq culur (3) - 3 freq waller (3) - 1 freq tiller (3) - 12 freq calle (3) - 2 freq teller (3) - 2 freq cull (3) - 7 freq |
SoundEx code - C460 clear - 492 freq caller - 80 freq collar - 72 freq clair - 56 freq colour - 259 freq calor - 2 freq cellar - 26 freq claer - 22 freq color - 2 freq cooler - 12 freq caaler - 1 freq clooer - 2 freq clour - 1 freq clara - 9 freq 'clear - 1 freq 'clure - 1 freq clure - 1 freq cloor - 3 freq cleer - 6 freq coloure - 1 freq clere - 3 freq culure - 1 freq coulour - 1 freq claire - 10 freq caleery - 2 freq callar - 4 freq clarry - 2 freq calorie - 1 freq colliery - 3 freq celery - 5 freq chillier - 1 freq 'claire' - 1 freq cullour - 6 freq culur - 3 freq clare - 12 freq cleary - 1 freq cleir - 3 freq colour' - 1 freq cler - 1 freq collier - 2 freq cleire - 1 freq culor - 1 freq cullar - 1 freq couler - 1 freq culler - 1 freq €œcaller - 1 freq caler - 1 freq cllr - 3 freq callier - 1 freq claure - 4 freq colair - 1 freq |
MetaPhone code - KLR clear - 492 freq glaur - 101 freq caller - 80 freq goller - 7 freq collar - 72 freq gallery - 23 freq clair - 56 freq colour - 259 freq glaurie - 7 freq glore - 5 freq calor - 2 freq glory - 92 freq killer - 23 freq claer - 22 freq color - 2 freq cooler - 12 freq galore - 23 freq caaler - 1 freq keller - 1 freq clooer - 2 freq clour - 1 freq clara - 9 freq glare - 15 freq 'clear - 1 freq 'clure - 1 freq clure - 1 freq glorie - 32 freq cloor - 3 freq cleer - 6 freq 'glory - 3 freq glar - 7 freq glarry - 2 freq coloure - 1 freq clere - 3 freq glaury - 14 freq culure - 1 freq coulour - 1 freq claire - 10 freq caleery - 2 freq callar - 4 freq clarry - 2 freq kilrea - 4 freq calorie - 1 freq colliery - 3 freq 'galerie - 1 freq 'galleri - 2 freq 'claire' - 1 freq cullour - 6 freq klieir - 1 freq culur - 3 freq clare - 12 freq cleary - 1 freq cleir - 3 freq colour' - 1 freq gaillery - 1 freq guller - 1 freq 'glory' - 2 freq glawrie - 10 freq cler - 1 freq gloir - 1 freq collier - 2 freq gallerie - 1 freq glowr - 1 freq glóri - 1 freq glour - 1 freq cleire - 1 freq gahler - 1 freq culor - 1 freq €˜glaur - 1 freq cullar - 1 freq couler - 1 freq culler - 1 freq gleer - 1 freq €œcaller - 1 freq caler - 1 freq cllr - 3 freq callier - 1 freq glr - 1 freq claure - 4 freq colair - 1 freq |
CULLER |
Time to execute Levenshtein function - 0.225188 milliseconds The Levenshtein distance is the number of characters you have to replace, insert or delete to transform one word into another, its useful for detecting typos and alternative spellings |
Time to execute Double Levenshtein function - 0.375349 milliseconds In a stroke of genius, this runs the Levenshtein function twice, once without vowels and adds the distance together, giving double weight to consonants. |
Time to execute SoundEx function - 0.027315 milliseconds Soundex is a phonetic algorithm for indexing names by sound, as pronounced in English. The goal is for homophones to be encoded to the same representation so that they can be matched despite minor differences in spelling. |
Time to execute MetaPhone function - 0.037083 milliseconds Metaphone is a phonetic algorithm, published by Lawrence Philips in 1990, for indexing words by their English pronunciation.[1] It fundamentally improves on the Soundex algorithm by using information about variations and inconsistencies in English spelling and pronunciation to produce a more accurate encoding, which does a better job of matching words and names which sound similar. |
Time to execute Manually curated function - 0.004985 milliseconds Manual Curation uses a lookup table / lexicon which has been created by hand which links words to their lemmas, and includes obvious typos and spelling variations. Not all words are covered. |