First Names Rhyming ANTOINETTE
English Words Rhyming ANTOINETTE
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES ANTOŻNETTE AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ANTOŻNETTE (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 9 Letters (ntoinette) - English Words That Ends with ntoinette:
Rhyming Words According to Last 8 Letters (toinette) - English Words That Ends with toinette:
Rhyming Words According to Last 7 Letters (oinette) - English Words That Ends with oinette:
Rhyming Words According to Last 6 Letters (inette) - English Words That Ends with inette:
cassinette | noun (n.) A cloth with a cotton warp, and a woof of very fine wool, or wool and silk. |
minette | noun (n.) The smallest of regular sizes of portrait photographs. |
reinette | noun (n.) A name given to many different kinds of apples, mostly of French origin. |
satinette | noun (n.) One of a breed of fancy frilled pigeons allied to the owls and turbits, having the body white, the shoulders tricolored, and the tail bluish black with a large white spot on each feather. |
toilinette | noun (n.) A cloth, the weft of which is of woolen yarn, and the warp of cotton and silk, -- used for waistcoats. |
vinette | noun (n.) A sprig or branch. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (nette) - English Words That Ends with nette:
brunette | adjective (a.) A girl or woman with a somewhat brown or dark complexion. |
| adjective (a.) Having a dark tint. |
chansonnette | noun (n.) A little song. |
cunette | noun (n.) A drain trench, in a ditch or moat; -- called also cuvette. |
genette | noun (n.) One of several species of small Carnivora of the genus Genetta, allied to the civets, but having the scent glands less developed, and without a pouch. |
| noun (n.) The fur of the common genet (Genetta vulgaris); also, any skin dressed in imitation of this fur. |
kerseynette | noun (n.) See Cassinette. |
kitchenette | noun (n.) A room combining a very small kitchen and a pantry, with the kitchen conveniences compactly arranged, sometimes so that they fold up out of sight and allow the kitchen to be made a part of the adjoining room by opening folding doors. |
lorgnette | noun (n.) An opera glass |
| noun (n.) elaborate double eyeglasses. |
lunette | noun (n.) A fieldwork consisting of two faces, forming a salient angle, and two parallel flanks. See Bastion. |
| noun (n.) A half horseshoe, which wants the sponge. |
| noun (n.) A kind of watch crystal which is more than ordinarily flattened in the center; also, a species of convexoconcave lens for spectacles. |
| noun (n.) A piece of felt to cover the eye of a vicious horse. |
| noun (n.) Any surface of semicircular or segmental form; especially, the piece of wall between the curves of a vault and its springing line. |
| noun (n.) An iron shoe at the end of the stock of a gun carriage. |
marionette | noun (n.) A puppet moved by strings, as in a puppet show. |
| noun (n.) The buffel duck. |
mignonette | noun (n.) A plant (Reseda odorata) having greenish flowers with orange-colored stamens, and exhaling a delicious fragrance. In Africa it is a low shrub, but further north it is usually an annual herb. |
minionette | noun (n.) A size of type between nonpareil and minion; -- used in ornamental borders, etc. |
| adjective (a.) Small; delicate. |
pianette | noun (n.) A small piano; a pianino. |
poy nette | noun (n.) A bodkin. |
solenette | noun (n.) A small European sole (Solea minuta). |
vignette | noun (n.) A running ornament consisting of leaves and tendrils, used in Gothic architecture. |
| noun (n.) A decorative design, originally representing vine branches or tendrils, at the head of a chapter, of a manuscript or printed book, or in a similar position; hence, by extension, any small picture in a book; hence, also, as such pictures are often without a definite bounding line, any picture, as an engraving, a photograph, or the like, which vanishes gradually at the edge. |
| noun (n.) A picture, illustration, or depiction in words, esp. one of a small or dainty kind. |
| verb (v. t.) To make, as an engraving or a photograph, with a border or edge insensibly fading away. |
villanette | noun (n.) A small villa. |
wagonette | noun (n.) A kind of pleasure wagon, uncovered and with seats extended along the sides, designed to carry six or eight persons besides the driver. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (ette) - English Words That Ends with ette:
aigrette | noun (n.) The small white European heron. See Egret. |
| noun (n.) A plume or tuft for the head composed of feathers, or of gems, etc. |
| noun (n.) A tuft like that of the egret. |
| noun (n.) A feathery crown of seed; egret; as, the aigrette or down of the dandelion or the thistle. |
aiguillette | noun (n.) A point or tag at the end of a fringe or lace; an aglet. |
| noun (n.) One of the ornamental tags, cords, or loops on some military and naval uniforms. |
ailette | noun (n.) A small square shield, formerly worn on the shoulders of knights, -- being the prototype of the modern epaulet. |
allumette | noun (n.) A match for lighting candles, lamps, etc. |
amassette | noun (n.) An instrument of horn used for collecting painters' colors on the stone in the process of grinding. |
amorette | noun (n.) An amoret. |
amusette | noun (n.) A light field cannon, or stocked gun mounted on a swivel. |
anisette | noun (n.) A French cordial or liqueur flavored with anise seeds. |
ariette | noun (n.) A short aria, or air. |
aviette | noun (n.) A heavier-than-air flying machine in which the motive power is furnished solely by the aviator. |
baguette | noun (n.) A small molding, like the astragal, but smaller; a bead. |
| noun (n.) One of the minute bodies seen in the divided nucleoli of some Infusoria after conjugation. |
banquette | noun (n.) A raised way or foot bank, running along the inside of a parapet, on which musketeers stand to fire upon the enemy. |
| noun (n.) A narrow window seat; a raised shelf at the back or the top of a buffet or dresser. |
| noun (n.) A bench or seat for passengers on the top of a diligence or other public vehicle. |
barbette | noun (n.) A mound of earth or a platform in a fortification, on which guns are mounted to fire over the parapet. |
blanquette | noun (n.) A white fricassee. |
bombazet bombazette | noun (n.) A sort of thin woolen cloth. It is of various colors, and may be plain or twilled. |
burette | noun (n.) An apparatus for delivering measured quantities of liquid or for measuring the quantity of liquid or gas received or discharged. It consists essentially of a graduated glass tube, usually furnished with a small aperture and stopcock. |
briolette | noun (n.) An oval or pearshaped diamond having its entire surface cut in triangular facets. |
briquette | noun (n.) A block of compacted coal dust, or peat, etc., for fuel. |
| noun (n.) A block of artificial stone in the form of a brick, used for paving; also, a molded sample of solidified cement or mortar for use as a test piece for showing the strength of the material. |
brochette | noun (n.) A small spit or skewer. |
cashmerette | noun (n.) A kind of dress goods, made with a soft and glossy surface like cashmere. |
cassolette | noun (n.) a box, or vase, with a perforated cover to emit perfumes. |
chemisette | noun (n.) An under-garment, worn by women, usually covering the neck, shoulders, and breast. |
chevrette | noun (n.) A machine for raising guns or mortar into their carriages. |
cigarette | noun (n.) A little cigar; a little fine tobacco rolled in paper for smoking. |
coquette | noun (n.) A vain, trifling woman, who endeavors to attract admiration from a desire to gratify vanity; a flirt; -- formerly sometimes applied also to men. |
| noun (n.) A tropical humming bird of the genus Lophornis, with very elegant neck plumes. Several species are known. See Illustration under Spangle, v. t. |
corvette | noun (n.) A war vessel, ranking next below a frigate, and having usually only one tier of guns; -- called in the United States navy a sloop of war. |
crossette | noun (n.) A return in one of the corners of the architrave of a door or window; -- called also ancon, ear, elbow. |
| noun (n.) The shoulder of a joggled keystone. |
curette | noun (n.) A scoop or ring with either a blunt or a cutting edge, for removing substances from the walls of a cavity, as from the eye, ear, or womb. |
| verb (v. t.) To scrape with a curette. |
cuvette | noun (n.) A pot, bucket, or basin, in which molten plate glass is carried from the melting pot to the casting table. |
| noun (n.) A cunette. |
| noun (n.) A small vessel with at least two flat and transparent sides, used to hold a liquid sample to be analysed in the light path of a spectrometer. |
cassette | noun (n.) Same as Seggar. |
collarette | noun (n.) A small collar; specif., a woman's collar of lace, fur, or other fancy material. |
cossette | noun (n.) One of the small chips or slices into which beets are cut in sugar making. |
dancette | adjective (a.) Deeply indented; having large teeth; thus, a fess dancette has only three teeth in the whole width of the escutcheon. |
echauguette | noun (n.) A small chamber or place of protection for a sentinel, usually in the form of a projecting turret, or the like. See Castle. |
egrette | noun (n.) Same as Egret, n., 2. |
epaulette | noun (n.) A shoulder ornament or badge worn by military and naval officers, differences of rank being marked by some peculiar form or device, as a star, eagle, etc.; a shoulder knot. |
epinglette | noun (n.) An iron needle for piercing the cartridge of a cannon before priming. |
eprouvette | noun (n.) An apparatus for testing or proving the strength of gunpowder. |
escopette | noun (n.) A kind of firearm; a carbine. |
estafette | noun (n.) A courier who conveys messages to another courier; a military courier sent from one part of an army to another. |
etiquette | noun (n.) The forms required by good breeding, or prescribed by authority, to be observed in social or official life; observance of the proprieties of rank and occasion; conventional decorum; ceremonial code of polite society. |
facette | noun (n.) See Facet, n. |
fauvette | noun (n.) A small singing bird, as the nightingale and warblers. |
fossette | noun (n.) A little hollow; hence, a dimple. |
| noun (n.) A small, deep-centered ulcer of the transparent cornea. |
fourchette | noun (n.) A table fork. |
| noun (n.) A small fold of membrane, connecting the labia in the posterior part of the vulva. |
| noun (n.) The wishbone or furculum of birds. |
| noun (n.) The frog of the hoof of the horse and allied animals. |
| noun (n.) An instrument used to raise and support the tongue during the cutting of the fraenum. |
| noun (n.) The forked piece between two adjacent fingers, to which the front and back portions are sewed. |
| noun (n.) The combination of the card immediately above and the one immediately below a given card. |
frizette | noun (n.) A curl of hair or silk; a pad of frizzed hair or silk worn by women under the hair to stuff it out. |
| noun (n.) a fringe of hair or curls worn about the forehead by women. |
fumette | noun (n.) The stench or high flavor of game or other meat when kept long. |
frisette | noun (n.) Alt. of Frizette |
gargoulette | noun (n.) A water cooler or jug with a handle and spout; a gurglet. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (tte) - English Words That Ends with tte:
alouatte | noun (n.) One of the several species of howling monkeys of South America. See Howler, 2. |
bayatte | noun (n.) A large, edible, siluroid fish of the Nile, of two species (Bagrina bayad and B. docmac). |
butte | noun (n.) A detached low mountain, or high rising abruptly from the general level of the surrounding plain; -- applied to peculiar elevations in the Rocky Mountain region. |
calotte | noun (n.) Alt. of Callot |
charlotte | noun (n.) A kind of pie or pudding made by lining a dish with slices of bread, and filling it with bread soaked in milk, and baked. |
carotte | noun (n.) A cylindrical roll of tobacco; as, a carotte of perique. |
euosmitte | noun (n.) A fossil resin, so called from its strong, peculiar, pleasant odor. |
euritte | noun (n.) A compact feldspathic rock; felsite. See Felsite. |
fytte | noun (n.) See Fit a song. |
gazette | noun (n.) A newspaper; a printed sheet published periodically; esp., the official journal published by the British government, and containing legal and state notices. |
| verb (v. t.) To announce or publish in a gazette; to announce officially, as an appointment, or a case of bankruptcy. |
glissette | noun (n.) The locus described by any point attached to a curve that slips continuously on another fixed curve, the movable curve having no rotation at any instant. |
grisette | noun (n.) A French girl or young married woman of the lower class; more frequently, a young working woman who is fond of gallantry. |
historiette | noun (n.) Historical narration on a small scale; a brief recital; a story. |
lafayette | noun (n.) The dollar fish. |
| noun (n.) A market fish, the goody, or spot (Liostomus xanthurus), of the southern coast of the United States. |
leatherette | noun (n.) An imitation of leather, made of paper and cloth. |
lobulette | noun (n.) A little lobule, or subdivision of a lobule. |
lorette | noun (n.) In France, a name for a woman who is supported by her lovers, and devotes herself to idleness, show, and pleasure; -- so called from the church of Notre Dame de Lorette, in Paris, near which many of them resided. |
layette | noun (n.) The outfit of clothing, blankets, etc., prepared for a newborn infant, and placed ready for used. |
mascotte | noun (n.) A person who is supposed to bring good luck to the household to which he or she belongs; anything that brings good luck. |
matte | noun (n.) A partly reduced copper sulphide, obtained by alternately roasting and melting copper ore in separating the metal from associated iron ores, and called coarse metal, fine metal, etc., according to the grade of fineness. On the exterior it is dark brown or black, but on a fresh surface is yellow or bronzy in color. |
| noun (n.) A dead or dull finish, as in gilding where the gold leaf is not burnished, or in painting where the surface is purposely deprived of gloss. |
moquette | noun (n.) A kind of carpet having a short velvety pile. |
motte | noun (n.) A clump of trees in a prairie. |
musette | noun (n.) A small bagpipe formerly in use, having a soft and sweet tone. |
| noun (n.) An air adapted to this instrument; also, a kind of rustic dance. |
matelotte | noun (n.) A stew, commonly of fish, flavored with wine, and served with a wine sauce containing onions, mushrooms, etc. |
| noun (n.) An old dance of sailors, in double time, and somewhat like a hornpipe. |
noisette | noun (n.) A hybrid rose produced in 1817, by a French gardener, Noisette, of Charleston, South Carolina, from the China rose and the musk rose. It has given rise to many fine varieties, as the Lamarque, the Marechal (or Marshal) Niel, and the Cloth of gold. Most roses of this class have clustered flowers and are of vigorous growth. |
novelette | noun (n.) A short novel. |
oubliette | noun (n.) A dungeon with an opening only at the top, found in some old castles and other strongholds, into which persons condemned to perpetual imprisonment, or to perish secretly, were thrust, or lured to fall. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ANTOŻNETTE (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 9 Letters (antoinett) - Words That Begins with antoinett:
Rhyming Words According to First 8 Letters (antoinet) - Words That Begins with antoinet:
Rhyming Words According to First 7 Letters (antoine) - Words That Begins with antoine:
Rhyming Words According to First 6 Letters (antoin) - Words That Begins with antoin:
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (antoi) - Words That Begins with antoi:
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (anto) - Words That Begins with anto:
antoeci | noun (n. pl) Alt. of Antoecians |
antoecians | noun (n. pl) Those who live under the same meridian, but on opposite parallels of latitude, north and south of the equator. |
antonomasia | noun (n.) The use of some epithet or the name of some office, dignity, or the like, instead of the proper name of the person; as when his majesty is used for a king, or when, instead of Aristotle, we say, the philosopher; or, conversely, the use of a proper name instead of an appellative, as when a wise man is called a Solomon, or an eminent orator a Cicero. |
antonomastic | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or characterized by, antonomasia. |
antonomasy | noun (n.) Antonomasia. |
antonym | noun (n.) A word of opposite meaning; a counterterm; -- used as a correlative of synonym. |
antorbital | noun (n.) The antorbital bone. |
| adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or situated in, the region of the front of the orbit. |
antorgastic | adjective (a.) See Antiorgastic. |
antozone | noun (n.) A compound formerly supposed to be modification of oxygen, but now known to be hydrogen dioxide; -- so called because apparently antagonistic to ozone, converting it into ordinary oxygen. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (ant) - Words That Begins with ant:
ant | noun (n.) A hymenopterous insect of the Linnaean genus Formica, which is now made a family of several genera; an emmet; a pismire. |
anta | noun (n.) A species of pier produced by thickening a wall at its termination, treated architecturally as a pilaster, with capital and base. |
antacid | noun (n.) A remedy for acidity of the stomach, as an alkali or absorbent. |
| adjective (a.) Counteractive of acidity. |
antacrid | adjective (a.) Corrective of acrimony of the humors. |
antaean | adjective (a.) Pertaining to Antaeus, a giant athlete slain by Hercules. |
antagonism | noun (n.) Opposition of action; counteraction or contrariety of things or principles. |
antagonist | noun (n.) One who contends with another, especially in combat; an adversary; an opponent. |
| noun (n.) A muscle which acts in opposition to another; as a flexor, which bends a part, is the antagonist of an extensor, which extends it. |
| noun (n.) A medicine which opposes the action of another medicine or of a poison when absorbed into the blood or tissues. |
| adjective (a.) Antagonistic; opposing; counteracting; as, antagonist schools of philosophy. |
antagonistic | adjective (a.) Alt. of Antagonistical |
antagonistical | adjective (a.) Opposing in combat, combating; contending or acting against; as, antagonistic forces. |
antagonozing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Antagonize |
antagony | noun (n.) Contest; opposition; antagonism. |
antalgic | noun (n.) A medicine to alleviate pain; an anodyne. |
| adjective (a.) Alleviating pain. |
antalkali | noun (n.) Alt. of Antalkaline |
antalkaline | noun (n.) Anything that neutralizes, or that counteracts an alkaline tendency in the system. |
| adjective (a.) Of power to counteract alkalies. |
antambulacral | adjective (a.) Away from the ambulacral region. |
antanaclasis | noun (n.) A figure which consists in repeating the same word in a different sense; as, Learn some craft when young, that when old you may live without craft. |
| noun (n.) A repetition of words beginning a sentence, after a long parenthesis; as, Shall that heart (which not only feels them, but which has all motions of life placed in them), shall that heart, etc. |
antanagoge | noun (n.) A figure which consists in answering the charge of an adversary, by a counter charge. |
antaphrodisiac | noun (n.) Anything that quells the venereal appetite. |
| adjective (a.) Capable of blunting the venereal appetite. |
antaphroditic | noun (n.) An antaphroditic medicine. |
| adjective (a.) Antaphrodisiac. |
| adjective (a.) Antisyphilitic. |
antapoplectic | noun (n.) A medicine used against apoplexy. |
| adjective (a.) Good against apoplexy. |
antarchism | noun (n.) Opposition to government in general. |
antarchist | noun (n.) One who opposes all government. |
antarchistic | adjective (a.) Alt. of Antarchistical |
antarchistical | adjective (a.) Opposed to all human government. |
antarctic | adjective (a.) Opposite to the northern or arctic pole; relating to the southern pole or to the region near it, and applied especially to a circle, distant from the pole 23” 28/. Thus we say the antarctic pole, circle, ocean, region, current, etc. |
antares | noun (n.) The principal star in Scorpio: -- called also the Scorpion's Heart. |
antarthritic | noun (n.) A remedy against gout. |
| adjective (a.) Counteracting or alleviating gout. |
antasthmatic | noun (n.) A remedy for asthma. |
| adjective (a.) Opposing, or fitted to relieve, asthma. |
ante | noun (n.) Each player's stake, which is put into the pool before (ante) the game begins. |
| verb (v. t. & i.) To put up (an ante). |
anteact | noun (n.) A preceding act. |
anteal | adjective (a.) Being before, or in front. |
antecedaneous | adjective (a.) Antecedent; preceding in time. |
antecedence | noun (n.) The act or state of going before in time; precedence. |
| noun (n.) An apparent motion of a planet toward the west; retrogradation. |
antecedency | noun (n.) The state or condition of being antecedent; priority. |
antecedent | noun (n.) That which goes before in time; that which precedes. |
| noun (n.) One who precedes or goes in front. |
| noun (n.) The earlier events of one's life; previous principles, conduct, course, history. |
| noun (n.) The noun to which a relative refers; as, in the sentence "Solomon was the prince who built the temple," prince is the antecedent of who. |
| noun (n.) The first or conditional part of a hypothetical proposition; as, If the earth is fixed, the sun must move. |
| noun (n.) The first of the two propositions which constitute an enthymeme or contracted syllogism; as, Every man is mortal; therefore the king must die. |
| noun (n.) The first of the two terms of a ratio; the first or third of the four terms of a proportion. In the ratio a:b, a is the antecedent, and b the consequent. |
| adjective (a.) Going before in time; prior; anterior; preceding; as, an event antecedent to the Deluge; an antecedent cause. |
| adjective (a.) Presumptive; as, an antecedent improbability. |
antecessor | noun (n.) One who goes before; a predecessor. |
| noun (n.) An ancestor; a progenitor. |
antechamber | noun (n.) A chamber or apartment before the chief apartment and leading into it, in which persons wait for audience; an outer chamber. See Lobby. |
| noun (n.) A space viewed as the outer chamber or the entrance to an interior part. |
antechapel | noun (n.) The outer part of the west end of a collegiate or other chapel. |
antecians | noun (n. pl.) See Ant/cians. |
antecommunion | noun (n.) A name given to that part of the Anglican liturgy for the communion, which precedes the consecration of the elements. |
antecursor | noun (n.) A forerunner; a precursor. |
antedate | noun (n.) Prior date; a date antecedent to another which is the actual date. |
| noun (n.) Anticipation. |
| verb (v. t.) To date before the true time; to assign to an earlier date; thus, to antedate a deed or a bond is to give it a date anterior to the true time of its execution. |
| verb (v. t.) To precede in time. |
| verb (v. t.) To anticipate; to make before the true time. |
antedating | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Antedate |
antediluvial | adjective (a.) Before the flood, or Deluge, in Noah's time. |
antediluvian | noun (n.) One who lived before the Deluge. |
| adjective (a.) Of or relating to the period before the Deluge in Noah's time; hence, antiquated; as, an antediluvian vehicle. |
antefact | noun (n.) Something done before another act. |
antefix | noun (n.) An ornament fixed upon a frieze. |
| noun (n.) An ornament at the eaves, concealing the ends of the joint tiles of the roof. |
| noun (n.) An ornament of the cymatium of a classic cornice, sometimes pierced for the escape of water. |
anteflexion | noun (n.) A displacement forward of an organ, esp. the uterus, in such manner that its axis is bent upon itself. |
antelope | noun (n.) One of a group of ruminant quadrupeds, intermediate between the deer and the goat. The horns are usually annulated, or ringed. There are many species in Africa and Asia. |
antelucan | adjective (a.) Held or being before light; -- a word applied to assemblies of Christians, in ancient times of persecution, held before light in the morning. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH ANTOŻNETTE:
English Words which starts with 'anto' and ends with 'ette':
English Words which starts with 'ant' and ends with 'tte':
English Words which starts with 'an' and ends with 'te':
analcite | noun (n.) Analcime. |
anastate | noun (n.) One of a series of substances formed, in secreting cells, by constructive or anabolic processes, in the production of protoplasm; -- opposed to katastate. |
anchorate | adjective (a.) Anchor-shaped. |
anchorite | noun (n.) One who renounces the world and secludes himself, usually for religious reasons; a hermit; a recluse. |
| noun (n.) Same as Anchoret. |
andalusite | noun (n.) A silicate of aluminium, occurring usually in thick rhombic prisms, nearly square, of a grayish or pale reddish tint. It was first discovered in Andalusia, Spain. |
andante | noun (n.) A movement or piece in andante time. |
| adjective (a.) Moving moderately slow, but distinct and flowing; quicker than larghetto, and slower than allegretto. |
andesite | noun (n.) An eruptive rock allied to trachyte, consisting essentially of a triclinic feldspar, with pyroxene, hornblende, or hypersthene. |
anecdote | noun (n.) Unpublished narratives. |
| noun (n.) A particular or detached incident or fact of an interesting nature; a biographical incident or fragment; a single passage of private life. |
anglesite | noun (n.) A native sulphate of lead. It occurs in white or yellowish transparent, prismatic crystals. |
angulate | adjective (a.) Alt. of Angulated |
| verb (v. t.) To make angular. |
angustate | adjective (a.) Narrowed. |
angustifoliate | adjective (a.) Alt. of Angustifolious |
anhydrite | noun (n.) A mineral of a white or a slightly bluish color, usually massive. It is anhydrous sulphate of lime, and differs from gypsum in not containing water (whence the name). |
animate | adjective (a.) Endowed with life; alive; living; animated; lively. |
| verb (v. t.) To give natural life to; to make alive; to quicken; as, the soul animates the body. |
| verb (v. t.) To give powers to, or to heighten the powers or effect of; as, to animate a lyre. |
| verb (v. t.) To give spirit or vigor to; to stimulate or incite; to inspirit; to rouse; to enliven. |
ankerite | noun (n.) A mineral closely related to dolomite, but containing iron. |
annihilate | adjective (a.) Annihilated. |
| verb (v. t.) To reduce to nothing or nonexistence; to destroy the existence of; to cause to cease to be. |
| verb (v. t.) To destroy the form or peculiar distinctive properties of, so that the specific thing no longer exists; as, to annihilate a forest by cutting down the trees. |
| verb (v. t.) To destroy or eradicate, as a property or attribute of a thing; to make of no effect; to destroy the force, etc., of; as, to annihilate an argument, law, rights, goodness. |
annotate | noun (n.) To explain or criticize by notes; as, to annotate the works of Bacon. |
| verb (v. i.) To make notes or comments; -- with on or upon. |
annulate | noun (n.) One of the Annulata. |
| adjective (a.) Alt. of Annulated |
annunciate | adjective (p. p. & a.) Foretold; preannounced. |
| verb (v. t.) To announce. |
anophyte | noun (n.) A moss or mosslike plant which cellular stems, having usually an upward growth and distinct leaves. |
anorthite | noun (n.) A mineral of the feldspar family, commonly occurring in small glassy crystals, also a constituent of some igneous rocks. It is a lime feldspar. See Feldspar. |
antepenultimate | noun (n.) The antepenult. |
| adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the last syllable but two. |
antholite | noun (n.) A fossil plant, like a petrified flower. |
anthophyllite | noun (n.) A mineral of the hornblende group, of a yellowish gray or clove brown color. |
anthracite | noun (n.) A hard, compact variety of mineral coal, of high luster, differing from bituminous coal in containing little or no bitumen, in consequence of which it burns with a nearly non luminous flame. The purer specimens consist almost wholly of carbon. Also called glance coal and blind coal. |
anthraconite | noun (n.) A coal-black marble, usually emitting a fetid smell when rubbed; -- called also stinkstone and swinestone. |
anthropolite | noun (n.) A petrifaction of the human body, or of any portion of it. |
anthropomorphite | noun (n.) One who ascribes a human form or human attributes to the Deity or to a polytheistic deity. Taylor. Specifically, one of a sect of ancient heretics who believed that God has a human form, etc. Tillotson. |
anthropophagite | noun (n.) A cannibal. |
antidote | noun (n.) A remedy to counteract the effects of poison, or of anything noxious taken into the stomach; -- used with against, for, or to; as, an antidote against, for, or to, poison. |
| noun (n.) Whatever tends to prevent mischievous effects, or to counteract evil which something else might produce. |
| verb (v. t.) To counteract or prevent the effects of, by giving or taking an antidote. |
| verb (v. t.) To fortify or preserve by an antidote. |
antimonate | noun (n.) A compound of antimonic acid with a base or basic radical. |
antimonite | noun (n.) A compound of antimonious acid and a base or basic radical. |
| noun (n.) Stibnite. |
anorthosite | noun (n.) A granular igneous rock composed almost exclusively of a soda-lime feldspar, usually labradorite. |
anthropopathite | noun (n.) One who ascribes human feelings to deity. |