First Names Rhyming DIONDRA
English Words Rhyming DIONDRA
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES DİONDRA AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH DİONDRA (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 6 Letters (iondra) - English Words That Ends with iondra:
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (ondra) - English Words That Ends with ondra:
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (ndra) - English Words That Ends with ndra:
dryandra | noun (n.) A genus of shrubs growing in Australia, having beautiful, hard, dry, evergreen leaves. |
isonandra | noun (n.) A genus of sapotaceous trees of India. Isonandra Gutta is the principal source of gutta-percha. |
scolopendra | noun (n.) A genus of venomous myriapods including the centipeds. See Centiped. |
| noun (n.) A sea fish. |
tundra | noun (n.) A rolling, marshy, mossy plain of Northern Siberia. |
| noun (n.) One of the level or undulating treeless plains characteristic of northern arctic regions in both hemispheres. The tundras mark the limit of arborescent vegetation; they consist of black mucky soil with a permanently frozen subsoil, but support a dense growth of mosses and lichens, and dwarf herbs and shrubs, often showy-flowered. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (dra) - English Words That Ends with dra:
cathedra | noun (n.) The official chair or throne of a bishop, or of any person in high authority. |
clepsydra | noun (n.) A water clock; a contrivance for measuring time by the graduated flow of a liquid, as of water, through a small aperture. See Illust. in Appendix. |
exedra | noun (n.) A room in a public building, furnished with seats. |
| noun (n.) The projection of any part of a building in a rounded form. |
| noun (n.) Any out-of-door seat in stone, large enough for several persons; esp., one of curved form. |
exhedra | noun (n.) See Exedra. |
hydra | noun (n.) A serpent or monster in the lake or marsh of Lerna, in the Peloponnesus, represented as having many heads, one of which, when cut off, was immediately succeeded by two others, unless the wound was cauterized. It was slain by Hercules. Hence, a terrible monster. |
| noun (n.) Hence: A multifarious evil, or an evil having many sources; not to be overcome by a single effort. |
| noun (n.) Any small fresh-water hydroid of the genus Hydra, usually found attached to sticks, stones, etc., by a basal sucker. |
| noun (n.) A southern constellation of great length lying southerly from Cancer, Leo, and Virgo. |
quadra | noun (n.) The plinth, or lowest member, of any pedestal, podium, water table, or the like. |
| noun (n.) A fillet, or listel. |
| noun (n.) The plinth, or lowest member, of any pedestal, podium, water table, or the like. |
| noun (n.) A fillet, or listel. |
sudra | noun (n.) The lowest of the four great castes among the Hindoos. See Caste. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH DİONDRA (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 6 Letters (diondr) - Words That Begins with diondr:
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (diond) - Words That Begins with diond:
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (dion) - Words That Begins with dion:
dionaea | noun (n.) An insectivorous plant. See Venus's flytrap. |
dionysian | adjective (a.) Relating to Dionysius, a monk of the 6th century; as, the Dionysian, or Christian, era. |
dionysia | noun (n. pl.) Any of the festivals held in honor of the Olympian god Dionysus. They correspond to the Roman Bacchanalia; the greater Dionysia were held at Athens in March or April, and were celebrated with elaborate performances of both tragedies and comedies. |
dionysiac | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to Dionysus or to the Dionysia; Bacchic; as, a Dionysiac festival; the Dionysiac theater at Athens. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (dio) - Words That Begins with dio:
diocesan | noun (n.) A bishop, viewed in relation to his diocese; as, the diocesan of New York. |
| noun (n.) The clergy or the people of a diocese. |
| adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to a diocese; as, diocesan missions. |
diocese | noun (n.) The circuit or extent of a bishop's jurisdiction; the district in which a bishop exercises his ecclesiastical authority. |
diocesener | noun (n.) One who belongs to a diocese. |
diodon | noun (n.) A genus of spinose, plectognath fishes, having the teeth of each jaw united into a single beaklike plate. They are able to inflate the body by taking in air or water, and, hence, are called globefishes, swellfishes, etc. Called also porcupine fishes, and sea hedgehogs. |
| noun (n.) A genus of whales. |
diodont | noun (n.) A fish of the genus Diodon, or an allied genus. |
| adjective (a.) Like or pertaining to the genus Diodon. |
dioecia | noun (n. pl.) A Linnaean class of plants having the stamens and pistils on different plants. |
| noun (n. pl.) A subclass of gastropod mollusks in which the sexes are separate. It includes most of the large marine species, like the conchs, cones, and cowries. |
dioecian | adjective (a.) Alt. of Dioecious |
dioecious | adjective (a.) Having the sexes in two separate individuals; -- applied to plants in which the female flowers occur on one individual and the male flowers on another of the same species, and to animals in which the ovum is produced by one individual and the sperm cell by another; -- opposed to monoecious. |
dioeciousness | noun (n.) The state or quality of being dioecious. |
dioecism | noun (n.) The condition of being dioecious. |
diogenes | noun (n.) A Greek Cynic philosopher (412?-323 B. C.) who lived much in Athens and was distinguished for contempt of the common aims and conditions of life, and for sharp, caustic sayings. |
dioicous | adjective (a.) See Dioecious. |
diomedea | noun (n.) A genus of large sea birds, including the albatross. See Albatross. |
diophantine | adjective (a.) Originated or taught by Diophantus, the Greek writer on algebra. |
diopside | noun (n.) A crystallized variety of pyroxene, of a clear, grayish green color; mussite. |
dioptase | noun (n.) A hydrous silicate of copper, occurring in emerald-green crystals. |
diopter | noun (n.) Alt. of Dioptra |
dioptra | noun (n.) An optical instrument, invented by Hipparchus, for taking altitudes, leveling, etc. |
dioptre | noun (n.) A unit employed by oculists in numbering glasses according to the metric system; a refractive power equal to that of a glass whose principal focal distance is one meter. |
dioptric | noun (n.) A dioptre. See Dioptre. |
| adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the dioptre, or to the metric system of numbering glasses. |
| adjective (a.) Alt. of Dioptrical |
dioptrical | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to dioptrics; assisting vision by means of the refraction of light; refractive; as, the dioptric system; a dioptric glass or telescope. |
dioptrics | noun (n.) The science of the refraction of light; that part of geometrical optics which treats of the laws of the refraction of light in passing from one medium into another, or through different mediums, as air, water, or glass, and esp. through different lenses; -- distinguished from catoptrics, which refers to reflected light. |
dioptry | noun (n.) A dioptre. |
diorama | noun (n.) A mode of scenic representation, invented by Daguerre and Bouton, in which a painting is seen from a distance through a large opening. By a combination of transparent and opaque painting, and of transmitted and reflected light, and by contrivances such as screens and shutters, much diversity of scenic effect is produced. |
| noun (n.) A building used for such an exhibition. |
dioramic | adjective (a.) Pertaining to a diorama. |
diorism | noun (n.) Definition; logical direction. |
dioristic | adjective (a.) Distinguishing; distinctive; defining. |
diorite | noun (n.) An igneous, crystalline in structure, consisting essentially of a triclinic feldspar and hornblende. It includes part of what was called greenstone. |
dioritic | adjective (a.) Containing diorite. |
diorthotic | adjective (a.) Relating to the correcting or straightening out of something; corrective. |
dioscorea | noun (n.) A genus of plants. See Yam. |
diota | noun (n.) A vase or drinking cup having two handles or ears. |
dioxide | noun (n.) An oxide containing two atoms of oxygen in each molecule; binoxide. |
| noun (n.) An oxide containing but one atom or equivalent of oxygen to two of a metal; a suboxide. |
dioxindol | noun (n.) A white, crystalline, nitrogenous substance obtained by the reduction of isatin. It is a member of the indol series; -- hence its name. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH DİONDRA:
English Words which starts with 'dio' and ends with 'dra':
English Words which starts with 'di' and ends with 'ra':
dicentra | noun (n.) A genus of herbaceous plants, with racemes of two-spurred or heart-shaped flowers, including the Dutchman's breeches, and the more showy Bleeding heart (D. spectabilis). |
dielytra | noun (n.) See Dicentra. |
dimera | noun (n. pl.) A division of Coleoptera, having two joints to the tarsi. |
| noun (n. pl.) A division of the Hemiptera, including the aphids. |
diptera | noun (n. pl.) An extensive order of insects having only two functional wings and two balancers, as the house fly, mosquito, etc. They have a suctorial proboscis, often including two pairs of sharp organs (mandibles and maxillae) with which they pierce the skin of animals. They undergo a complete metamorphosis, their larvae (called maggots) being usually without feet. |
discophora | noun (n. pl.) A division of acalephs or jellyfishes, including most of the large disklike species. |
diaspora | noun (n.) Lit., "Dispersion." -- applied collectively: (a) To those Jews who, after the Exile, were scattered through the Old World, and afterwards to Jewish Christians living among heathen. Cf. James i. 1. (b) By extension, to Christians isolated from their own communion, as among the Moravians to those living, usually as missionaries, outside of the parent congregation. |