Name Report For First Name IMAN:
IMAN
First name IMAN's origin is African. IMAN means "somali and muslim name meaning "faith."". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with IMAN below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of iman.(Brown names are of the same origin (African) with IMAN and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
Rhymes with IMAN - Names & Words
First Names Rhyming IMAN
FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES ÝMAN AS A WHOLE:
kaimana yasiman nahimana imanuela kimane sulaiman siman hakizimana ahriman abhimanyu harimanna harimanne imani harimann harriman hariman cartimandua imanolNAMES RHYMING WITH ÝMAN (According to last letters):
Rhyming Names According to Last 3 Letters (man) - Names That Ends with man:
shuman abdiraxman aman abdul-rahman ayman luqman ma'n nu'man othman rahman salman yaman deman geldersman woudman zeeman lukman uthman ackerman raedeman whiteman syman atman ueman carman abdalrahman aekerman altman brickman coleman colman coman daman delman eman firman freeman freman garman garrman german gorman hardtman harman hartman herman holman kalman leaman leman leyman loman luxman marchman milman nachman norman ordman ormeman osman rayman readman redman rickman ricman rodman roman sherman steadman stedeman stilleman tedman tillman treoweman truman wacuman whitman wigman wyman yoman kellman hyman jarman yeoman wakeman tilman stillman ryman richman orman millman lyman chapman beaman toman sulayman stedman emman eraman sammanNAMES RHYMING WITH ÝMAN (According to first letters):
Rhyming Names According to First 3 Letters (ima) - Names That Begins with ima:
imad imala imaraRhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (im) - Names That Begins with im:
imelda immaculada immanuel imogen imran imre imtithalNAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH ÝMAN:
First Names which starts with 'i' and ends with 'n':
iain ian iasion iason iban iden ihrin ihsan inazin inghean inghinn ioan ion irfan irin irven irvin irvyn irwin irwyn isen isleen istvan iulian ivalyn ivan iven ivon ixcatzin ixion izaan izazkun izmirlianEnglish Words Rhyming IMAN
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES ÝMAN AS A WHOLE:
ahriman | noun (n.) The Evil Principle or Being of the ancient Persians; the Prince of Darkness as opposer to Ormuzd, the King of Light. |
archimandrite | noun (n.) A chief of a monastery, corresponding to abbot in the Roman Catholic church. |
noun (n.) A superintendent of several monasteries, corresponding to superior abbot, or father provincial, in the Roman Catholic church. |
ariman | noun (n.) See Ahriman. |
bimana | noun (n. pl.) Animals having two hands; -- a term applied by Cuvier to man as a special order of Mammalia. |
bimanous | adjective (a.) Having two hands; two-handed. |
caiman | noun (n.) See Cayman. |
claimant | noun (n.) One who claims; one who asserts a right or title; a claimer. |
declaimant | noun (n.) A declaimer. |
demiman | noun (n.) A half man. |
griman | noun (n.) The man who manipulates a grip. |
iman | noun (n.) Alt. of Imaum |
kusimanse | noun (n.) A carnivorous animal (Crossarchus obscurus) of tropical Africa. It its allied to the civets. Called also kusimansel, and mangue. |
liman | noun (n.) The deposit of slime at the mouth of a river; slime. |
longimanous | adjective (a.) Having long hands. |
pedimana | noun (n. pl.) A division of marsupials, including the opossums. |
pedimane | noun (n.) A pedimanous marsupial; an opossum. |
pedimanous | adjective (a.) Having feet resembling hands, or with the first toe opposable, as the opossums and monkeys. |
reclaimant | noun (n.) One who reclaims; one who cries out against or contradicts. |
reprimand | noun (n.) Severe or formal reproof; reprehension, private or public. |
noun (n.) To reprove severely; to reprehend; to chide for a fault; to consure formally. | |
noun (n.) To reprove publicly and officially, in execution of a sentence; as, the court ordered him to be reprimanded. |
reprimanding | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Reprimand |
reprimander | noun (n.) One who reprimands. |
sillimanite | noun (n.) Same as Fibrolite. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ÝMAN (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (man) - English Words That Ends with man:
alderman | noun (n.) A senior or superior; a person of rank or dignity. |
noun (n.) One of a board or body of municipal officers next in order to the mayor and having a legislative function. They may, in some cases, individually exercise some magisterial and administrative functions. |
alman | noun (n.) A German. |
(adj.) German. | |
(adj.) The German language. | |
(adj.) A kind of dance. See Allemande. |
almsman | noun (n.) A recipient of alms. |
noun (n.) A giver of alms. |
alongshoreman | noun (n.) See Longshoreman. |
artilleryman | noun (n.) A man who manages, or assists in managing, a large gun in firing. |
artsman | noun (n.) A man skilled in an art or in arts. |
assemblyman | noun (n.) A member of an assembly, especially of the lower branch of a state legislature. |
ataman | noun (n.) A hetman, or chief of the Cossacks. |
axman | noun (n.) One who wields an ax. |
airman | noun (n.) A man who ascends or flies in an aircraft; a flying machine pilot. |
airwoman | noun (n.) A woman who ascends or flies in an aircraft. |
atman | noun (n.) The life principle, soul, or individual essence. |
noun (n.) The universal ego from whom all individual atmans arise. This sense is a European excrescence on the East Indian thought. |
backwoodsman | noun (n.) A man living in the forest in or beyond the new settlements, especially on the western frontiers of the older portions of the United States. |
bagman | noun (n.) A commercial traveler; one employed to solicit orders for manufacturers and tradesmen. |
bargeman | noun (n.) The man who manages a barge, or one of the crew of a barge. |
batman | noun (n.) A weight used in the East, varying according to the locality; in Turkey, the greater batman is about 157 pounds, the lesser only a fourth of this; at Aleppo and Smyrna, the batman is 17 pounds. |
noun (n.) A man who has charge of a bathorse and his load. |
batsman | noun (n.) The one who wields the bat in cricket, baseball, etc. |
beadsman | noun (n.) Alt. of Bedesman |
bedesman | noun (n.) A poor man, supported in a beadhouse, and required to pray for the soul of its founder; an almsman. |
noun (n.) Same as Beadsman. |
beadswoman | noun (n.) Alt. of Bedeswoman |
bedeswoman | noun (n.) Fem. of Beadsman. |
bellman | noun (n.) A man who rings a bell, especially to give notice of anything in the streets. Formerly, also, a night watchman who called the hours. |
billman | noun (n.) One who uses, or is armed with, a bill or hooked ax. |
birdman | noun (n.) A fowler or birdcatcher. |
noun (n.) An aviator; airman. |
boatman | noun (n.) A man who manages a boat; a rower of a boat. |
noun (n.) A boat bug. See Boat bug. |
boatsman | noun (n.) A boatman. |
boatwoman | noun (n.) A woman who manages a boat. |
bombardman | noun (n.) One who carried liquor or beer in a can or bombard. |
bondman | noun (n.) A man slave, or one bound to service without wages. |
noun (n.) A villain, or tenant in villenage. |
bondsman | noun (n.) A slave; a villain; a serf; a bondman. |
noun (n.) A surety; one who is bound, or who gives security, for another. |
bondswoman | noun (n.) See Bondwoman. |
bondwoman | noun (n.) A woman who is a slave, or in bondage. |
bookman | noun (n.) A studious man; a scholar. |
bordman | noun (n.) A bordar; a tenant in bordage. |
bosjesman | noun (n.) See Bushman. |
bowman | noun (n.) A man who uses a bow; an archer. |
noun (n.) The man who rows the foremost oar in a boat; the bow oar. |
brachman | noun (n.) See Brahman. |
brahman | noun (n.) Alt. of Brahmin |
brakeman | noun (n.) A man in charge of a brake or brakes. |
noun (n.) The man in charge of the winding (or hoisting) engine for a mine. |
breakman | noun (n.) See Brakeman. |
brideman | noun (n.) See Bridesmaid, Bridesman. |
bridesman | noun (n.) A male friend who attends upon a bridegroom and bride at their marriage; the "best man." |
briefman | noun (n.) One who makes a brief. |
noun (n.) A copier of a manuscript. |
burman | noun (n.) A member of the Burman family, one of the four great families Burmah; also, sometimes, any inhabitant of Burmah; a Burmese. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the Burmans or to Burmah. |
bushelman | noun (n.) A tailor's assistant for repairing garments; -- called also busheler. |
bushman | noun (n.) A woodsman; a settler in the bush. |
noun (n.) One of a race of South African nomads, living principally in the deserts, and not classified as allied in race or language to any other people. |
butterman | noun (n.) A man who makes or sells butter. |
bayman | noun (n.) In the United States navy, a sick-bay nurse; -- now officially designated as hospital apprentice. |
birdwoman | noun (n.) An airwoman; an aviatress. |
cabman | noun (n.) The driver of a cab. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ÝMAN (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (ima) - Words That Begins with ima:
image | noun (n.) An imitation, representation, or similitude of any person, thing, or act, sculptured, drawn, painted, or otherwise made perceptible to the sight; a visible presentation; a copy; a likeness; an effigy; a picture; a semblance. |
noun (n.) Hence: The likeness of anything to which worship is paid; an idol. | |
noun (n.) Show; appearance; cast. | |
noun (n.) A representation of anything to the mind; a picture drawn by the fancy; a conception; an idea. | |
noun (n.) A picture, example, or illustration, often taken from sensible objects, and used to illustrate a subject; usually, an extended metaphor. | |
noun (n.) The figure or picture of any object formed at the focus of a lens or mirror, by rays of light from the several points of the object symmetrically refracted or reflected to corresponding points in such focus; this may be received on a screen, a photographic plate, or the retina of the eye, and viewed directly by the eye, or with an eyeglass, as in the telescope and microscope; the likeness of an object formed by reflection; as, to see one's image in a mirror. | |
verb (v. t.) To represent or form an image of; as, the still lake imaged the shore; the mirror imaged her figure. | |
verb (v. t.) To represent to the mental vision; to form a likeness of by the fancy or recollection; to imagine. |
imaging | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Image |
imageable | adjective (a.) That may be imaged. |
imageless | adjective (a.) Having no image. |
imager | noun (n.) One who images or forms likenesses; a sculptor. |
imagery | noun (n.) The work of one who makes images or visible representation of objects; imitation work; images in general, or in mass. |
noun (n.) Fig.: Unreal show; imitation; appearance. | |
noun (n.) The work of the imagination or fancy; false ideas; imaginary phantasms. | |
noun (n.) Rhetorical decoration in writing or speaking; vivid descriptions presenting or suggesting images of sensible objects; figures in discourse. |
imaginability | noun (n.) Capacity for imagination. |
imaginable | adjective (a.) Capable of being imagined; conceivable. |
imaginal | adjective (a.) Characterized by imagination; imaginative; also, given to the use or rhetorical figures or imagins. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to an imago. |
imaginant | noun (n.) An imaginer. |
adjective (a.) Imagining; conceiving. |
imaginarily | adjective (a.) In a imaginary manner; in imagination. |
imaginariness | noun (n.) The state or quality of being imaginary; unreality. |
imaginary | noun (n.) An imaginary expression or quantity. |
adjective (a.) Existing only in imagination or fancy; not real; fancied; visionary; ideal. |
imaginate | adjective (a.) Imaginative. |
imagination | noun (n.) The imagine-making power of the mind; the power to create or reproduce ideally an object of sense previously perceived; the power to call up mental imagines. |
noun (n.) The representative power; the power to reconstruct or recombine the materials furnished by direct apprehension; the complex faculty usually termed the plastic or creative power; the fancy. | |
noun (n.) The power to recombine the materials furnished by experience or memory, for the accomplishment of an elevated purpose; the power of conceiving and expressing the ideal. | |
noun (n.) A mental image formed by the action of the imagination as a faculty; a conception; a notion. |
imaginational | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, involving, or caused by, imagination. |
imaginationalism | noun (n.) Idealism. |
imaginative | adjective (a.) Proceeding from, and characterized by, the imagination, generally in the highest sense of the word. |
adjective (a.) Given to imagining; full of images, fancies, etc.; having a quick imagination; conceptive; creative. | |
adjective (a.) Unreasonably suspicious; jealous. |
imagining | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Imagine |
imaginer | noun (n.) One who forms ideas or conceptions; one who contrives. |
imaginous | adjective (a.) Imaginative. |
imago | noun (n.) An image. |
noun (n.) The final adult, and usually winged, state of an insect. See Illust. of Ant-lion, and Army worm. |
imam | noun (n.) Alt. of Imaum |
imaum | noun (n.) Among the Mohammedans, a minister or priest who performs the regular service of the mosque. |
noun (n.) A Mohammedan prince who, as a successor of Mohammed, unites in his person supreme spiritual and temporal power. |
imaret | noun (n.) A lodging house for Mohammedan pilgrims. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH ÝMAN:
English Words which starts with 'i' and ends with 'n':
iatromathematician | noun (n.) One of a school of physicians in Italy, about the middle of the 17th century, who tried to apply the laws of mechanics and mathematics to the human body, and hence were eager student of anatomy; -- opposed to the iatrochemists. |
iberian | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to Iberia. |
icarian | adjective (a.) Soaring too high for safety, like Icarus; adventurous in flight. |
iceman | noun (n.) A man who is skilled in traveling upon ice, as among glaciers. |
noun (n.) One who deals in ice; one who retails or delivers ice. |
ichneumon | noun (n.) Any carnivorous mammal of the genus Herpestes, and family Viverridae. Numerous species are found in Asia and Africa. The Egyptian species(H. ichneumon), which ranges to Spain and Palestine, is noted for destroying the eggs and young of the crocodile as well as various snakes and lizards, and hence was considered sacred by the ancient Egyptians. The common species of India (H. griseus), known as the mongoose, has similar habits and is often domesticated. It is noted for killing the cobra. |
noun (n.) Any hymenopterous insect of the family Ichneumonidae, of which several thousand species are known, belonging to numerous genera. |
ichneumonidan | noun (n.) One of the Ichneumonidae. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the Ichneumonidae, or ichneumon flies. |
ichthidin | noun (n.) A substance from the egg yolk of osseous fishes. |
ichthin | noun (n.) A nitrogenous substance resembling vitellin, present in the egg yolk of cartilaginous fishes. |
ichthulin | noun (n.) A substance from the yolk of salmon's egg. |
ichthyosaurian | noun (n.) One of the Ichthyosauria. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the Ichthyosauria. |
icon | noun (n.) An image or representation; a portrait or pretended portrait. |
noun (n.) A sacred picture representing the Virgin Mary, Christ, a saint, or a martyr, and having the same function as an image of such a person in the Latin Church. |
icosahedron | noun (n.) A solid bounded by twenty sides or faces. |
icosandrian | adjective (a.) Alt. of Icosandrous |
icositetrahedron | noun (n.) A twenty-four-sided solid; a tetragonal trisoctahedron or trapezohedron. |
idalian | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to Idalium, a mountain city in Cyprus, or to Venus, to whom it was sacred. |
idealization | noun (n.) The act or process of idealizing. |
noun (n.) The representation of natural objects, scenes, etc., in such a way as to show their most important characteristics; the study of the ideal. |
ideation | noun (n.) The faculty or capacity of the mind for forming ideas; the exercise of this capacity; the act of the mind by which objects of sense are apprehended and retained as objects of thought. |
identification | noun (n.) The act of identifying, or proving to be the same; also, the state of being identified. |
idioticon | noun (n.) A dictionary of a peculiar dialect, or of the words and phrases peculiar to one part of a country; a glossary. |
idorgan | noun (n.) A morphological unit, consisting of two or more plastids, which does not possess the positive character of the person or stock, in distinction from the physiological organ or biorgan. See Morphon. |
idumean | noun (n.) An inhabitant of Idumea, an Edomite. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to ancient Idumea, or Edom, in Western Asia. |
ignition | noun (n.) The act of igniting, kindling, or setting on fire. |
noun (n.) The state of being ignited or kindled. |
iguanian | adjective (a.) Resembling, or pertaining to, the iguana. |
iguanodon | noun (n.) A genus of gigantic herbivorous dinosaurs having a birdlike pelvis and large hind legs with three-toed feet capable of supporting the entire body. Its teeth resemble those of the iguana, whence its name. Several species are known, mostly from the Wealden of England and Europe. See Illustration in Appendix. |
ilicin | noun (n.) The bitter principle of the holly. |
ilixanthin | noun (n.) A yellow dye obtained from the leaves of the holly. |
ilkon | noun (pron.) Alt. of Ilkoon |
ilkoon | noun (pron.) Each one; every one. |
illaqueation | noun (n.) The act of catching or insnaring. |
noun (n.) A snare; a trap. |
illation | noun (n.) The act or process of inferring from premises or reasons; perception of the connection between ideas; that which is inferred; inference; deduction; conclusion. |
illecebration | noun (n.) Allurement. |
illegitimation | noun (n.) The act of illegitimating; bastardizing. |
noun (n.) The state of being illegitimate; illegitimacy. |
illimitation | noun (n.) State of being illimitable; want of, or freedom from, limitation. |
illinition | noun (n.) A smearing or rubbing in or on; also, that which is smeared or rubbed on, as ointment or liniment. |
noun (n.) A thin crust of some extraneous substance formed on minerals. |
illiquation | noun (n.) The melting or dissolving of one thing into another. |
illision | noun (n.) The act of dashing or striking against. |
illumination | noun (n.) The act of illuminating, or supplying with light; the state of being illuminated. |
noun (n.) Festive decoration of houses or buildings with lights. | |
noun (n.) Adornment of books and manuscripts with colored illustrations. See Illuminate, v. t., 3. | |
verb (v. t.) That which is illuminated, as a house; also, an ornamented book or manuscript. | |
verb (v. t.) That which illuminates or gives light; brightness; splendor; especially, intellectual light or knowledge. | |
verb (v. t.) The special communication of knowledge to the mind by God; inspiration. |
illusion | noun (n.) An unreal image presented to the bodily or mental vision; a deceptive appearance; a false show; mockery; hallucination. |
noun (n.) Hence: Anything agreeably fascinating and charning; enchantment; witchery; glamour. | |
noun (n.) A sensation originated by some external object, but so modified as in any way to lead to an erroneous perception; as when the rolling of a wagon is mistaken for thunder. | |
noun (n.) A plain, delicate lace, usually of silk, used for veils, scarfs, dresses, etc. |
illustration | noun (n.) The act of illustrating; the act of making clear and distinct; education; also, the state of being illustrated, or of being made clear and distinct. |
noun (n.) That which illustrates; a comparison or example intended to make clear or apprehensible, or to remove obscurity. | |
noun (n.) A picture designed to decorate a volume or elucidate a literary work. |
illutation | noun (n.) The act or operation of smearing the body with mud, especially with the sediment from mineral springs; a mud bath. |
imbibition | noun (n.) The act or process of imbibing, or absorbing; as, the post-mortem imbibition of poisons. |
imbrication | noun (n.) An overlapping of the edges, like that of tiles or shingles; hence, intricacy of structure; also, a pattern or decoration representing such a structure. |
imbution | noun (n.) An imbuing. |
imesatin | noun (n.) A dark yellow, crystalline substance, obtained by the action of ammonia on isatin. |
imitation | noun (n.) The act of imitating. |
noun (n.) That which is made or produced as a copy; that which is made to resemble something else, whether for laudable or for fraudulent purposes; likeness; resemblance. | |
noun (n.) One of the principal means of securing unity and consistency in polyphonic composition; the repetition of essentially the same melodic theme, phrase, or motive, on different degrees of pitch, by one or more of the other parts of voises. Cf. Canon. | |
noun (n.) The act of condition of imitating another species of animal, or a plant, or unanimate object. See Imitate, v. t., 3. |
immanation | noun (n.) A flowing or entering in; -- opposed to emanation. |
immersion | noun (n.) The act of immersing, or the state of being immersed; a sinking within a fluid; a dipping; as, the immersion of Achilles in the Styx. |
noun (n.) Submersion in water for the purpose of Christian baptism, as, practiced by the Baptists. | |
noun (n.) The state of being overhelmed or deeply absorbed; deep engagedness. | |
noun (n.) The dissapearance of a celestail body, by passing either behind another, as in the occultation of a star, or into its shadow, as in the eclipse of a satellite; -- opposed to emersion. |
immigration | noun (n.) The act of immigrating; the passing or coming into a country for the purpose of permanent residence. |
imminution | noun (n.) A lessening; diminution; decrease. |
immission | noun (n.) The act of immitting, or of sending or thrusting in; injection; -- the correlative of emission. |
immoderation | noun (n.) Want of moderation. |
immolation | noun (n.) The act of immolating, or the state of being immolated, or sacrificed. |
noun (n.) That which is immolated; a sacrifice. |
immortalization | noun (n.) The act of immortalizing, or state of being immortalized. |
immortification | noun (n.) Failure to mortify the passions. |
immutation | noun (n.) Change; alteration; mutation. |
impaction | noun (n.) The driving of one fragment of bone into another so that the fragments are not movable upon each other; as, impaction of the skull or of the hip. |
noun (n.) An immovable packing; (Med.), a lodgment of something in a strait or passage of the body; as, impaction of the fetal head in the strait of the pelvis; impaction of food or feces in the intestines of man or beast. |
impanation | adjective (a.) Embodiment in bread; the supposed real presence and union of Christ's material body and blood with the substance of the elements of the eucharist without a change in their nature; -- distinguished from transubstantiation, which supposes a miraculous change of the substance of the elements. It is akin to consubstantiation. |
impartation | noun (n.) The act of imparting, or the thing imparted. |
impastation | noun (n.) The act of making into paste; that which is formed into a paste or mixture; specifically, a combination of different substances by means of cements. |
impatronization | noun (n.) Absolute seignory or possession; the act of investing with such possession. |
impedition | noun (n.) A hindering; a hindrance. |
imperatorian | adjective (a.) Imperial. |
imperception | noun (n.) Want of perception. |
imperfection | adjective (a.) The quality or condition of being imperfect; want of perfection; incompleteness; deficiency; fault or blemish. |
imperforation | noun (n.) The state of being without perforation. |
impersonation | noun (n.) Alt. of Impersonification |
impersonification | noun (n.) The act of impersonating; personification; investment with personality; representation in a personal form. |
imperturbation | noun (n.) Freedom from agitation of mind; calmness; quietude. |
impetration | noun (n.) The act of impetrating, or obtaining by petition or entreaty. |
noun (n.) The obtaining of benefice from Rome by solicitation, which benefice belonged to the disposal of the king or other lay patron of the realm. |
impignoration | noun (n.) The act of pawning or pledging; the state of being pawned. |
impinguation | noun (n.) The act of making fat, or the state of being fat or fattened. |
implantation | noun (n.) The act or process of implantating. |
impletion | noun (n.) The act of filling, or the state of being full. |
noun (n.) That which fills up; filling. |
implexion | noun (n.) Act of involving, or state of being involved; involution. |
implication | noun (n.) The act of implicating, or the state of being implicated. |
noun (n.) An implying, or that which is implied, but not expressed; an inference, or something which may fairly be understood, though not expressed in words. |
imploration | noun (n.) The act of imploring; earnest supplication. |
implosion | noun (n.) A burstion inwards, as of a vessel from which the air has been exhausted; -- contrasted with explosion. |
noun (n.) A sudden compression of the air in the mouth, simultaneously with and affecting the sound made by the closure of the organs in uttering p, t, or k, at the end of a syllable (see Guide to Pronunciation, //159, 189); also, a similar compression made by an upward thrust of the larynx without any accompanying explosive action, as in the peculiar sound of b, d, and g, heard in Southern Germany. |
impoon | noun (n.) The duykerbok. |
imposition | noun (n.) The act of imposing, laying on, affixing, enjoining, inflicting, obtruding, and the like. |
noun (n.) That which is imposed, levied, or enjoined; charge; burden; injunction; tax. | |
noun (n.) An extra exercise enjoined on students as a punishment. | |
noun (n.) An excessive, arbitrary, or unlawful exaction; hence, a trick or deception put on laid on others; cheating; fraud; delusion; imposture. | |
noun (n.) The act of laying on the hands as a religious ceremoy, in ordination, confirmation, etc. | |
noun (n.) The act or process of imosing pages or columns of type. See Impose, v. t., 4. |
imposthumation | noun (n.) The act of forming an abscess; state of being inflamed; suppuration. |
noun (n.) An abscess; an imposthume. |
imprecation | noun (n.) The act of imprecating, or invoking evil upon any one; a prayer that a curse or calamity may fall on any one; a curse. |
imprecision | noun (n.) Want of precision. |
impregnation | noun (n.) The act of impregnating or the state of being impregnated; fecundation. |
noun (n.) The fusion of a female germ cell (ovum) with a male germ cell (in animals, a spermatozoon) to form a single new cell endowed with the power of developing into a new individual; fertilization; fecundation. | |
noun (n.) That with which anything is impregnated. | |
noun (n.) Intimate mixture; influsion; saturation. | |
noun (n.) An ore deposit, with indefinite boundaries, consisting of rock impregnated with ore. |
impreparation | noun (n.) Want of preparation. |
impression | noun (n.) The act of impressing, or the state of being impressed; the communication of a stamp, mold, style, or character, by external force or by influence. |
noun (n.) That which is impressed; stamp; mark; indentation; sensible result of an influence exerted from without. | |
noun (n.) That which impresses, or exercises an effect, action, or agency; appearance; phenomenon. | |
noun (n.) Influence or effect on the senses or the intellect hence, interest, concern. | |
noun (n.) An indistinct notion, remembrance, or belief. | |
noun (n.) Impressiveness; emphasis of delivery. | |
noun (n.) The pressure of the type on the paper, or the result of such pressure, as regards its appearance; as, a heavy impression; a clear, or a poor, impression; also, a single copy as the result of printing, or the whole edition printed at a given time. | |
noun (n.) In painting, the first coat of color, as the priming in house painting and the like. | |
noun (n.) A print on paper from a wood block, metal plate, or the like. |
improbation | noun (n.) The act of disapproving; disapprobation. |
noun (n.) The act by which falsehood and forgery are proved; an action brought for the purpose of having some instrument declared false or forged. |
improperation | noun (n.) The act of upbraiding or taunting; a reproach; a taunt. |
impropriation | noun (n.) The act of impropriating; as, the impropriation of property or tithes; also, that which is impropriated. |
noun (n.) The act of putting an ecclesiastical benefice in the hands of a layman, or lay corporation. | |
noun (n.) A benefice in the hands of a layman, or of a lay corporation. |
improvisation | noun (n.) The act or art of composing and rendering music, poetry, and the like, extemporaneously; as, improvisation on the organ. |
noun (n.) That which is improvised; an impromptu. |
improvision | noun (n.) Improvidence. |
impugnation | noun (n.) Act of impugning; opposition; attack. |
impulsion | noun (n.) The act of impelling or driving onward, or the state of being impelled; the sudden or momentary agency of a body in motion on another body; also, the impelling force, or impulse. |
noun (n.) Influence acting unexpectedly or temporarily on the mind; sudden motive or influence; impulse. |
impuration | noun (n.) Defilement; obscuration. |
inaction | noun (n.) Want of action or activity; forbearance from labor; idleness; rest; inertness. |
inactuation | noun (n.) Operation. |
inadaptation | noun (n.) Want of adaptation; unsuitableness. |
inadequation | noun (n.) Want of exact correspondence. |
inadhesion | noun (n.) Want of adhesion. |
inaffectation | noun (n.) Freedom from affectation; naturalness. |
inanimation | noun (n.) Want of animation; lifeless; dullness. |
noun (n.) Infusion of life or vigor; animation; inspiration. |