First Names Rhyming DEHEUNE
English Words Rhyming DEHEUNE
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES DEHEUNE AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH DEHEUNE (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 6 Letters (eheune) - English Words That Ends with eheune:
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (heune) - English Words That Ends with heune:
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (eune) - English Words That Ends with eune:
dejeune | noun (n.) A dejeuner. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (une) - English Words That Ends with une:
aune | noun (n.) A French cloth measure, of different parts of the country (at Paris, 0.95 of an English ell); -- now superseded by the meter. |
commune | noun (n.) Communion; sympathetic intercourse or conversation between friends. |
| noun (n.) The commonalty; the common people. |
| noun (n.) A small territorial district in France under the government of a mayor and municipal council; also, the inhabitants, or the government, of such a district. See Arrondissement. |
| noun (n.) Absolute municipal self-government. |
| verb (v. i.) To converse together with sympathy and confidence; to interchange sentiments or feelings; to take counsel. |
| verb (v. i.) To receive the communion; to partake of the eucharist or Lord's supper. |
demilune | noun (n.) A work constructed beyond the main ditch of a fortress, and in front of the curtain between two bastions, intended to defend the curtain; a ravelin. See Ravelin. |
| noun (n.) A crescentic mass of granular protoplasm present in the salivary glands. |
dune | noun (n.) A low hill of drifting sand usually formed on the coats, but often carried far inland by the prevailing winds. |
fortune | noun (n.) The arrival of something in a sudden or unexpected manner; chance; accident; luck; hap; also, the personified or deified power regarded as determining human success, apportioning happiness and unhappiness, and distributing arbitrarily or fortuitously the lots of life. |
| noun (n.) That which befalls or is to befall one; lot in life, or event in any particular undertaking; fate; destiny; as, to tell one's fortune. |
| noun (n.) That which comes as the result of an undertaking or of a course of action; good or ill success; especially, favorable issue; happy event; success; prosperity as reached partly by chance and partly by effort. |
| noun (n.) Wealth; large possessions; large estate; riches; as, a gentleman of fortune. |
| noun (n.) To make fortunate; to give either good or bad fortune to. |
| noun (n.) To provide with a fortune. |
| noun (n.) To presage; to tell the fortune of. |
| verb (v. i.) To fall out; to happen. |
immune | noun (n.) One who is immune; esp., a person who is immune from a disease by reason of previous affection with the disease or inoculation. |
| adjective (a.) Exempt; protected by inoculation. |
importune | adjective (a.) To request or solicit, with urgency; to press with frequent, unreasonable, or troublesome application or pertinacity; hence, to tease; to irritate; to worry. |
| adjective (a.) To import; to signify. |
| verb (v. i.) To require; to demand. |
impune | adjective (a.) Unpunished. |
infortune | noun (n.) Misfortune. |
inopportune | adjective (a.) Not opportune; inconvenient; unseasonable; as, an inopportune occurrence, remark, etc. |
jejune | adjective (a.) Lacking matter; empty; void of substance. |
| adjective (a.) Void of interest; barren; meager; dry; as, a jejune narrative. |
june | noun (n.) The sixth month of the year, containing thirty days. |
| noun (n.) The sister and wife of Jupiter, the queen of heaven, and the goddess who presided over marriage. She corresponds to the Greek Hera. |
| noun (n.) One of the early discovered asteroids. |
lacune | noun (n.) A lacuna. |
lagune | noun (n.) See Lagoon. |
lune | noun (n.) Anything in the shape of a half moon. |
| noun (n.) A figure in the form of a crescent, bounded by two intersecting arcs of circles. |
| noun (n.) A fit of lunacy or madness; a period of frenzy; a crazy or unreasonable freak. |
malacatune | noun (n.) See Melocoton. |
misfortune | noun (n.) Bad fortune or luck; calamity; an evil accident; disaster; mishap; mischance. |
| verb (v. i.) To happen unluckily or unfortunately; to miscarry; to fail. |
neptune | noun (n.) The son of Saturn and Ops, the god of the waters, especially of the sea. He is represented as bearing a trident for a scepter. |
| noun (n.) The remotest known planet of our system, discovered -- as a result of the computations of Leverrier, of Paris -- by Galle, of Berlin, September 23, 1846. Its mean distance from the sun is about 2,775,000,000 miles, and its period of revolution is about 164,78 years. |
nyctibune | noun (n.) A South American bird of the genus Nyctibius, allied to the goatsuckers. |
opportune | adjective (a.) Convenient; ready; hence, seasonable; timely. |
| verb (v. t.) To suit. |
paune | noun (n.) A kind of bread. See Pone. |
picayune | noun (n.) A small coin of the value of six and a quarter cents. See Fippenny bit. |
plenilune | noun (n.) The full moon. |
prune | noun (n.) A plum; esp., a dried plum, used in cookery; as, French or Turkish prunes; California prunes. |
| verb (v. t.) To lop or cut off the superfluous parts, branches, or shoots of; to clear of useless material; to shape or smooth by trimming; to trim: as, to prune trees; to prune an essay. |
| verb (v. t.) To cut off or cut out, as useless parts. |
| verb (v. t.) To preen; to prepare; to dress. |
| verb (v. i.) To dress; to prink; -used humorously or in contempt. |
rune | noun (n.) A letter, or character, belonging to the written language of the ancient Norsemen, or Scandinavians; in a wider sense, applied to the letters of the ancient nations of Northern Europe in general. |
| noun (n.) Old Norse poetry expressed in runes. |
semilune | noun (n.) The half of a lune. |
tribune | noun (n.) An officer or magistrate chosen by the people, to protect them from the oppression of the patricians, or nobles, and to defend their liberties against any attempts that might be made upon them by the senate and consuls. |
| noun (n.) Anciently, a bench or elevated place, from which speeches were delivered; in France, a kind of pulpit in the hall of the legislative assembly, where a member stands while making an address; any place occupied by a public orator. |
triune | adjective (a.) Being three in one; -- an epithet used to express the unity of a trinity of persons in the Godhead. |
tune | noun (n.) A sound; a note; a tone. |
| noun (n.) A rhythmical, melodious, symmetrical series of tones for one voice or instrument, or for any number of voices or instruments in unison, or two or more such series forming parts in harmony; a melody; an air; as, a merry tune; a mournful tune; a slow tune; a psalm tune. See Air. |
| noun (n.) The state of giving the proper, sound or sounds; just intonation; harmonious accordance; pitch of the voice or an instrument; adjustment of the parts of an instrument so as to harmonize with itself or with others; as, the piano, or the organ, is not in tune. |
| noun (n.) Order; harmony; concord; fit disposition, temper, or humor; right mood. |
| verb (v. t.) To put into a state adapted to produce the proper sounds; to harmonize, to cause to be in tune; to correct the tone of; as, to tune a piano or a violin. |
| verb (v. t.) To give tone to; to attune; to adapt in style of music; to make harmonious. |
| verb (v. t.) To sing with melody or harmony. |
| verb (v. t.) To put into a proper state or disposition. |
| verb (v. i.) To form one sound to another; to form accordant musical sounds. |
| verb (v. i.) To utter inarticulate harmony with the voice; to sing without pronouncing words; to hum. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH DEHEUNE (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 6 Letters (deheun) - Words That Begins with deheun:
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (deheu) - Words That Begins with deheu:
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (dehe) - Words That Begins with dehe:
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (deh) - Words That Begins with deh:
dehiscence | noun (n.) The act of gaping. |
| noun (n.) A gaping or bursting open along a definite line of attachment or suture, without tearing, as in the opening of pods, or the bursting of capsules at maturity so as to emit seeds, etc.; also, the bursting open of follicles, as in the ovaries of animals, for the expulsion of their contents. |
dehiscent | adjective (a.) Characterized by dehiscence; opening in some definite way, as the capsule of a plant. |
dehonestation | noun (n.) A dishonoring; disgracing. |
dehorning | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Dehorn |
dehors | noun (n.) All sorts of outworks in general, at a distance from the main works; any advanced works for protection or cover. |
| prep (prep.) Out of; without; foreign to; out of the agreement, record, will, or other instrument. |
dehorting | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Dehort |
dehortation | noun (n.) Dissuasion; advice against something. |
dehortative | adjective (a.) Dissuasive. |
dehortatory | adjective (a.) Fitted or designed to dehort or dissuade. |
dehorter | noun (n.) A dissuader; an adviser to the contrary. |
dehydration | noun (n.) The act or process of freeing from water; also, the condition of a body from which the water has been removed. |
dehydrogenation | noun (n.) The act or process of freeing from hydrogen; also, the condition resulting from the removal of hydrogen. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH DEHEUNE:
English Words which starts with 'deh' and ends with 'une':
English Words which starts with 'de' and ends with 'ne':
decane | noun (n.) A liquid hydrocarbon, C10H22, of the paraffin series, including several isomeric modifications. |
decene | noun (n.) One of the higher hydrocarbons, C10H20, of the ethylene series. |
decine | noun (n.) One of the higher hydrocarbons, C10H15, of the acetylene series; -- called also decenylene. |
delaine | noun (n.) A kind of fabric for women's dresses. |
delphine | adjective (a.) Pertaining to the dauphin of France; as, the Delphin classics, an edition of the Latin classics, prepared in the reign of Louis XIV., for the use of the dauphin (in usum Delphini). |
| adjective (a.) Pertaining to the dolphin, a genus of fishes. |
delphinine | noun (n.) A poisonous alkaloid extracted from the stavesacre (Delphinium staphisagria), as a colorless amorphous powder. |
demesne | noun (n.) A lord's chief manor place, with that part of the lands belonging thereto which has not been granted out in tenancy; a house, and the land adjoining, kept for the proprietor's own use. |
demitone | noun (n.) Semitone. |
dentine | noun (n.) The dense calcified substance of which teeth are largely composed. It contains less animal matter than bone, and in the teeth of man is situated beneath the enamel. |
dentiphone | noun (n.) An instrument which, placed against the teeth, conveys sound to the auditory nerve; an audiphone. |
dermatine | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the skin. |
derne | adjective (a.) To hide; to skulk. |
desmine | noun (n.) Same as Stilbite. It commonly occurs in bundles or tufts of crystals. |