EDIE
First name EDIE's origin is English. EDIE means "spoils of war". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with EDIE below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of edie.(Brown names are of the same origin (English) with EDIE and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming EDIE
FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES EDİE AS A WHOLE:
NAMES RHYMING WITH EDİE (According to last letters):
Rhyming Names According to Last 3 Letters (die) - Names That Ends with die:
baladie dordie nadie addie alodie andie audie birdie brandie candie gerdie goldie hildie jodie judie kadie lindie maddie madie maidie mandie mindie saidie tibeldie zadie brodie codie eddie freddie gordie leocadie lundie teddie sadie melodie cadieRhyming Names According to Last 2 Letters (ie) - Names That Ends with ie:
dolie kessie armenouhie voshkie zophie adrie annemie sofie eulalie rosemarie emilie lorelie argie clytie ophelie phemie tiphanie kalanie ailsie rosalie michie demissie selassie quaashie beattie gillespie guthrie anatolie dimitrie eftemie ivantie abbie adalie ahelie allie alvarie alvie amalie amelie anamarie anatie annamarie annie annmarie anthonie armonie ashlie atalie athalie audrie azelie balie barbie bessie bethanie billie bonie bonnie braylie brittanie brylie cailie caitie callieNAMES RHYMING WITH EDİE (According to first letters):
Rhyming Names According to First 3 Letters (edi) - Names That Begins with edi:
ediline edina edine edingu edison edit edita edith editha edittaRhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (ed) - Names That Begins with ed:
eda edan edana edbert edda eddis eddison eddrick eddy ede edee edeen edel edelina edeline edelmar edelmarr eden edenia eder edern edet edfu edgar edgard edgardo edjo edla edlen edlin edlyn edlynn edlynne edmanda edmee edmon edmond edmonda edmondo edmund edmunda edmundo edna edoardo edorta edra edrea edred edric edrick edrigu edrik edris edrys edsel edson eduard eduarda eduardo edur edurne edva edvard edw edwa edwald edwaldo edward edwardo edwardson edwin edwina edwinna edwy edwyn edyt edyth edytha edytheNAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH EDİE:
First Names which starts with 'e' and ends with 'e':
eadsele eadwardsone eadwine ealdwode earie earle earlene earline earwine eastre ebiere eevee effie egbertine egbertyne eglantine eguskine ehawee eileene eilene eirene eithne elaine elayne elberte elbertine elcie eldride eldridge elene eleonore elfie elgine eliane elidure elinore elisa-mae elisamarie elise elke ellaine ellayne elle ellee ellene ellesse ellette ellice ellie ellone ellyce elmore elne eloise eloisee elpide else elsie elsje elvie elvine elvyne elwine elyce elye elyse elzie emele emelene emeline emeraude emestine emile emilee emma-lise emmalee emmaline emmanuele emmanuelle emmarae emmeline emmie emylee endre ene enerstyne engelbertine enide enite enrique eostre ephie ercole erianthe erie erienne erigone eriphyle erle erleneEnglish Words Rhyming EDIE
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES EDİE AS A WHOLE:
comedienne | noun (n.) A women who plays in comedy. |
comedietta | noun (n.) A dramatic sketch; a brief comedy. |
disobedience | noun (n.) Neglect or refusal to obey; violation of a command or prohibition. |
disobediency | noun (n.) Disobedience. |
disobedient | adjective (a.) Neglecting or refusing to obey; omitting to do what is commanded, or doing what is prohibited; refractory; not observant of duty or rules prescribed by authority; -- applied to persons and acts. |
adjective (a.) Not yielding. |
expedience | noun (n.) Alt. of Expediency |
expediency | noun (n.) The quality of being expedient or advantageous; fitness or suitableness to effect a purpose intended; adaptedness to self-interest; desirableness; advantage; advisability; -- sometimes contradistinguished from moral rectitude. |
noun (n.) Expedition; haste; dispatch. | |
noun (n.) An expedition; enterprise; adventure. |
expedient | noun (n.) That which serves to promote or advance; suitable means to accomplish an end. |
noun (n.) Means devised in an exigency; shift. | |
adjective (a.) Hastening or forward; hence, tending to further or promote a proposed object; fit or proper under the circumstances; conducive to self-interest; desirable; advisable; advantageous; -- sometimes contradistinguished from right. | |
adjective (a.) Quick; expeditious. |
inexpedience | noun (n.) Alt. of Inexpediency |
inexpediency | noun (n.) The quality or state of being inexpedient; want of fitness; unsuitableness to the end or object; impropriety; as, the inexpedience of some measures. |
inexpedient | adjective (a.) Not expedient; not tending to promote a purpose; not tending to the end desired; inadvisable; unfit; improper; unsuitable to time and place; as, what is expedient at one time may be inexpedient at another. |
ingredience | noun (n.) Alt. of Ingrediency |
ingrediency | noun (n.) Entrance; ingress. |
noun (n.) The quality or state of being an ingredient or component part. |
ingredient | noun (n.) That which enters into a compound, or is a component part of any combination or mixture; an element; a constituent. |
adjective (a.) Entering as, or forming, an ingredient or component part. |
inobedience | noun (n.) Disobedience. |
inobedient | adjective (a.) Not obedient; disobedient. |
mediety | noun (n.) The middle part; half; moiety. |
misobedience | noun (n.) Mistaken obedience; disobedience. |
nonobedience | noun (n.) Neglect of obedience; failure to obey. |
obedience | noun (n.) The act of obeying, or the state of being obedient; compliance with that which is required by authority; subjection to rightful restraint or control. |
noun (n.) Words or actions denoting submission to authority; dutifulness. | |
noun (n.) A following; a body of adherents; as, the Roman Catholic obedience, or the whole body of persons who submit to the authority of the pope. | |
noun (n.) A cell (or offshoot of a larger monastery) governed by a prior. | |
noun (n.) One of the three monastic vows. | |
noun (n.) The written precept of a superior in a religious order or congregation to a subject. |
obedienciary | noun (n.) One yielding obedience. |
obedient | adjective (a.) Subject in will or act to authority; willing to obey; submissive to restraint, control, or command. |
obediential | adjective (a.) According to the rule of obedience. |
priedieu | noun (n.) A kneeling desk for prayers. |
redient | adjective (a.) Returning. |
regredience | noun (n.) A going back; a retrogression; a return. |
tragedienne | noun (n.) A woman who plays in tragedy. |
unexpedient | adjective (a.) Inexpedient. |
unobedience | noun (n.) Disobedience. |
unobedient | adjective (a.) Disobedient. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH EDİE (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (die) - English Words That Ends with die:
accidie | noun (n.) Sloth; torpor. |
almadie | noun (n.) A bark canoe used by the Africans. |
noun (n.) A boat used at Calicut, in India, about eighty feet long, and six or seven broad. |
beardie | noun (n.) The bearded loach (Nemachilus barbatus) of Europe. |
birdie | noun (n.) A pretty or dear little bird; -- a pet name. |
cadie | noun (n.) Alt. of Caddie |
caddie | noun (n.) A Scotch errand boy, porter, or messenger. |
noun (n.) A cadet. | |
noun (n.) A lad; young fellow. | |
noun (n.) One who does errands or other odd jobs. | |
noun (n.) An attendant who carries a golf player's clubs, tees his ball, etc. |
cowardie | noun (n.) Cowardice. |
cowdie | noun (n.) See Kauri. |
dandie | noun (n.) One of a breed of small terriers; -- called also Dandie Dinmont. |
noun (n.) In Scott's "Guy Mannering", a Border farmer of eccentric but fine character, who owns two terriers claimed to be the progenitors of the Dandie Dinmont terriers. | |
noun (n.) One of a breed of terriers with short legs, long body, and rough coat, originating in the country about the English and Scotch border. |
die | noun (n.) A small cube, marked on its faces with spots from one to six, and used in playing games by being shaken in a box and thrown from it. See Dice. |
noun (n.) Any small cubical or square body. | |
noun (n.) That which is, or might be, determined, by a throw of the die; hazard; chance. | |
noun (n.) That part of a pedestal included between base and cornice; the dado. | |
noun (n.) A metal or plate (often one of a pair) so cut or shaped as to give a certain desired form to, or impress any desired device on, an object or surface, by pressure or by a blow; used in forging metals, coining, striking up sheet metal, etc. | |
noun (n.) A perforated block, commonly of hardened steel used in connection with a punch, for punching holes, as through plates, or blanks from plates, or for forming cups or capsules, as from sheet metal, by drawing. | |
noun (n.) A hollow internally threaded screw-cutting tool, made in one piece or composed of several parts, for forming screw threads on bolts, etc.; one of the separate parts which make up such a tool. | |
verb (v. i.) To pass from an animate to a lifeless state; to cease to live; to suffer a total and irreparable loss of action of the vital functions; to become dead; to expire; to perish; -- said of animals and vegetables; often with of, by, with, from, and rarely for, before the cause or occasion of death; as, to die of disease or hardships; to die by fire or the sword; to die with horror at the thought. | |
verb (v. i.) To suffer death; to lose life. | |
verb (v. i.) To perish in any manner; to cease; to become lost or extinct; to be extinguished. | |
verb (v. i.) To sink; to faint; to pine; to languish, with weakness, discouragement, love, etc. | |
verb (v. i.) To become indifferent; to cease to be subject; as, to die to pleasure or to sin. | |
verb (v. i.) To recede and grow fainter; to become imperceptible; to vanish; -- often with out or away. | |
verb (v. i.) To disappear gradually in another surface, as where moldings are lost in a sloped or curved face. | |
verb (v. i.) To become vapid, flat, or spiritless, as liquor. | |
(pl. ) of Dice |
geordie | noun (n.) A name given by miners to George Stephenson's safety lamp. |
goldie | noun (n.) The European goldfinch. |
noun (n.) The yellow-hammer. |
gowdie | noun (n.) See Dragont. |
haddie | noun (n.) The haddock. |
laddie | noun (n.) A lad; a male sweetheart. |
medjidie | noun (n.) Alt. of Medjidieh |
organdie | noun (n.) Alt. of Organdy |
waddie | noun (n. & v.) See Waddy. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH EDİE (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (edi) - Words That Begins with edi:
edibility | noun (n.) Suitableness for being eaten; edibleness. |
edible | noun (n.) Anything edible. |
adjective (a.) Fit to be eaten as food; eatable; esculent; as, edible fishes. |
edibleness | noun (n.) Suitableness for being eaten. |
edict | noun (n.) A public command or ordinance by the sovereign power; the proclamation of a law made by an absolute authority, as if by the very act of announcement; a decree; as, the edicts of the Roman emperors; the edicts of the French monarch. |
edictal | adjective (a.) Relating to, or consisting of, edicts; as, the Roman edictal law. |
edificant | adjective (a.) Building; constructing. |
edification | noun (n.) The act of edifying, or the state of being edified; a building up, especially in a moral or spiritual sense; moral, intellectual, or spiritual improvement; instruction. |
noun (n.) A building or edifice. |
edificatory | adjective (a.) Tending to edification. |
edifice | noun (n.) A building; a structure; an architectural fabric; -- chiefly applied to elegant houses, and other large buildings; as, a palace, a church, a statehouse. |
edificial | adjective (a.) Pertaining to an edifice; structural. |
edifier | noun (n.) One who builds. |
noun (n.) One who edifies, builds up, or strengthens another by moral or religious instruction. |
edifying | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Edify |
adjective (a.) Instructing; improving; as, an edifying conversation. |
edile | noun (n.) See Aedile. |
edileship | noun (n.) The office of aedile. |
edingtonite | noun (n.) A grayish white zeolitic mineral, in tetragonal crystals. It is a hydrous silicate of alumina and baryta. |
editing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Edit |
edition | noun (n.) A literary work edited and published, as by a certain editor or in a certain manner; as, a good edition of Chaucer; Chalmers' edition of Shakespeare. |
noun (n.) The whole number of copies of a work printed and published at one time; as, the first edition was soon sold. |
editioner | noun (n.) An editor. |
editor | noun (n.) One who edits; esp., a person who prepares, superintends, revises, and corrects a book, magazine, or newspaper, etc., for publication. |
editorial | noun (n.) A leading article in a newspaper or magazine; an editorial article; an article published as an expression of the views of the editor. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to an editor; written or sanctioned by an editor; as, editorial labors; editorial remarks. |
editorship | noun (n.) The office or charge of an editor; care and superintendence of a publication. |
editress | noun (n.) A female editor. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH EDİE:
English Words which starts with 'e' and ends with 'e':
eagle | noun (n.) Any large, rapacious bird of the Falcon family, esp. of the genera Aquila and Haliaeetus. The eagle is remarkable for strength, size, graceful figure, keenness of vision, and extraordinary flight. The most noted species are the golden eagle (Aquila chrysaetus); the imperial eagle of Europe (A. mogilnik / imperialis); the American bald eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus); the European sea eagle (H. albicilla); and the great harpy eagle (Thrasaetus harpyia). The figure of the eagle, as the king of birds, is commonly used as an heraldic emblem, and also for standards and emblematic devices. See Bald eagle, Harpy, and Golden eagle. |
noun (n.) A gold coin of the United States, of the value of ten dollars. | |
noun (n.) A northern constellation, containing Altair, a star of the first magnitude. See Aquila. | |
noun (n.) The figure of an eagle borne as an emblem on the standard of the ancient Romans, or so used upon the seal or standard of any people. |
eaglestone | noun (n.) A concretionary nodule of clay ironstone, of the size of a walnut or larger, so called by the ancients, who believed that the eagle transported these stones to her nest to facilitate the laying of her eggs; aetites. |
eagre | noun (n.) A wave, or two or three successive waves, of great height and violence, at flood tide moving up an estuary or river; -- commonly called the bore. See Bore. |
eale | noun (n.) Ale. |
eame | noun (n.) Uncle. |
earable | adjective (a.) Arable; tillable. |
earache | noun (n.) Ache or pain in the ear. |
earcockle | noun (n.) A disease in wheat, in which the blackened and contracted grain, or ear, is filled with minute worms. |
earsore | noun (n.) An annoyance to the ear. |
earthdrake | noun (n.) A mythical monster of the early Anglo-Saxon literature; a dragon. |
earthenware | noun (n.) Vessels and other utensils, ornaments, or the like, made of baked clay. See Crockery, Pottery, Stoneware, and Porcelain. |
earthquake | noun (n.) A shaking, trembling, or concussion of the earth, due to subterranean causes, often accompanied by a rumbling noise. The wave of shock sometimes traverses half a hemisphere, destroying cities and many thousand lives; -- called also earthdin, earthquave, and earthshock. |
adjective (a.) Like, or characteristic of, an earthquake; loud; starling. |
earthquave | noun (n.) An earthquake. |
ease | noun (n.) Satisfaction; pleasure; hence, accommodation; entertainment. |
noun (n.) Freedom from anything that pains or troubles; as: (a) Relief from labor or effort; rest; quiet; relaxation; as, ease of body. | |
noun (n.) Freedom from care, solicitude, or anything that annoys or disquiets; tranquillity; peace; comfort; security; as, ease of mind. | |
noun (n.) Freedom from constraint, formality, difficulty, embarrassment, etc.; facility; liberty; naturalness; -- said of manner, style, etc.; as, ease of style, of behavior, of address. | |
noun (n.) To free from anything that pains, disquiets, or oppresses; to relieve from toil or care; to give rest, repose, or tranquility to; -- often with of; as, to ease of pain; ease the body or mind. | |
noun (n.) To render less painful or oppressive; to mitigate; to alleviate. | |
noun (n.) To release from pressure or restraint; to move gently; to lift slightly; to shift a little; as, to ease a bar or nut in machinery. | |
noun (n.) To entertain; to furnish with accommodations. |
eatable | noun (n.) Something fit to be eaten. |
adjective (a.) Capable of being eaten; fit to be eaten; proper for food; esculent; edible. |
eatage | noun (n.) Eatable growth of grass for horses and cattle, esp. that of aftermath. |
ebionite | noun (n.) One of a sect of heretics, in the first centuries of the church, whose doctrine was a mixture of Judaism and Christianity. They denied the divinity of Christ, regarding him as an inspired messenger, and rejected much of the New Testament. |
ebonite | noun (n.) A hard, black variety of vulcanite. It may be cut and polished, and is used for many small articles, as combs and buttons, and for insulating material in electric apparatus. |
ebracteate | adjective (a.) Without bracts. |
ebracteolate | adjective (a.) Without bracteoles, or little bracts; -- said of a pedicel or flower stalk. |
ebrauke | adjective (a.) Hebrew. |
ebrillade | noun (n.) A bridle check; a jerk of one rein, given to a horse when he refuses to turn. |
ebullience | noun (n.) Alt. of Ebulliency |
ebullioscope | noun (n.) An instrument for observing the boiling point of liquids, especially for determining the alcoholic strength of a mixture by the temperature at which it boils. |
eburnine | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to ivory. |
ecarte | noun (n.) A game at cards, played usually by two persons, in which the players may discard any or all of the cards dealt and receive others from the pack. |
noun (n.) A game at cards for two persons, with 32 cards, ranking K, Q, J, A, 10, 9, 8, 7. Five cards are dealt each player, and the 11th turned as trump. Five points constitute a game. |
ecaudate | adjective (a.) Without a tail or spur. |
adjective (a.) Tailless. |
ecbole | noun (n.) A digression in which a person is introduced speaking his own words. |
ecboline | noun (n.) An alkaloid constituting the active principle of ergot; -- so named from its power of producing abortion. |
eccle | noun (n.) The European green woodpecker; -- also called ecall, eaquall, yaffle. |
ecgonine | noun (n.) A colorless, crystalline, nitrogenous base, obtained by the decomposition of cocaine. |
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. |
eche | noun (a. / a. pron.) Each. |
echidnine | noun (n.) The clear, viscid fluid secreted by the poison glands of certain serpents; also, a nitrogenous base contained in this, and supposed to be the active poisonous principle of the virus. |
echinate | adjective (a.) Alt. of Echinated |
echinite | noun (n.) A fossil echinoid. |
echinulate | adjective (a.) Set with small spines or prickles. |
echoscope | noun (n.) An instrument for intensifying sounds produced by percussion of the thorax. |
eclipse | noun (n.) An interception or obscuration of the light of the sun, moon, or other luminous body, by the intervention of some other body, either between it and the eye, or between the luminous body and that illuminated by it. A lunar eclipse is caused by the moon passing through the earth's shadow; a solar eclipse, by the moon coming between the sun and the observer. A satellite is eclipsed by entering the shadow of its primary. The obscuration of a planet or star by the moon or a planet, though of the nature of an eclipse, is called an occultation. The eclipse of a small portion of the sun by Mercury or Venus is called a transit of the planet. |
noun (n.) The loss, usually temporary or partial, of light, brilliancy, luster, honor, consciousness, etc.; obscuration; gloom; darkness. | |
verb (v. t.) To cause the obscuration of; to darken or hide; -- said of a heavenly body; as, the moon eclipses the sun. | |
verb (v. t.) To obscure, darken, or extinguish the beauty, luster, honor, etc., of; to sully; to cloud; to throw into the shade by surpassing. | |
verb (v. i.) To suffer an eclipse. |
eclogite | noun (n.) A rock consisting of granular red garnet, light green smaragdite, and common hornblende; -- so called in reference to its beauty. |
eclogue | noun (n.) A pastoral poem, in which shepherds are introduced conversing with each other; a bucolic; an idyl; as, the Ecloques of Virgil, from which the modern usage of the word has been established. |
ecorche | noun (n.) A manikin, or image, representing an animal, especially man, with the skin removed so that the muscles are exposed for purposes of study. |
ecossaise | noun (n.) A dancing tune in the Scotch style. |
ecostate | adjective (a.) Having no ribs or nerves; -- said of a leaf. |
ecoute | noun (n.) One of the small galleries run out in front of the glacis. They serve to annoy the enemy's miners. |
ecphoneme | noun (n.) A mark (!) used to indicate an exclamation. |
ectomere | noun (n.) The more transparent cells, which finally become external, in many segmenting ova, as those of mammals. |
ectoparasite | noun (n.) Any parasite which lives on the exterior of animals; -- opposed to endoparasite. |
ectype | noun (n.) A copy, as in pottery, of an artist's original work. Hence: |
noun (n.) A work sculptured in relief, as a cameo, or in bas-relief (in this sense used loosely). | |
noun (n.) A copy from an original; a type of something that has previously existed. |
ecurie | noun (n.) A stable. |
edematose | adjective (a.) Same as oedematous. |
edenite | noun (n.) A variety of amphibole. See Amphibole. |
edentate | noun (n.) One of the Edentata. |
adjective (a.) Destitute of teeth; as, an edentate quadruped; an edentate leaf. | |
adjective (a.) Belonging to the Edentata. |
edgebone | noun (n.) Same as Aitchbone. |
edomite | noun (n.) One of the descendants of Esau or Edom, the brother of Jacob; an Idumean. |
educable | adjective (a.) Capable of being educated. |
educative | adjective (a.) Tending to educate; that gives education; as, an educative process; an educative experience. |
educible | adjective (a.) Capable of being educed. |
eductive | adjective (a.) Tending to draw out; extractive. |
edulcorative | adjective (a.) Tending to /weeten or purify by affusions of water. |
eelfare | noun (n.) A brood of eels. |
eerie | adjective (a.) Alt. of Eery |
eerisome | adjective (a.) Causing fear; eerie. |
effable | adjective (a.) Capable of being uttered or explained; utterable. |
effaceable | adjective (a.) Capable of being effaced. |
effectible | adjective (a.) Capable of being done or achieved; practicable; feasible. |
effective | noun (n.) That which produces a given effect; a cause. |
noun (n.) One who is capable of active service. | |
noun (n.) Specie or coin, as distinguished from paper currency; -- a term used in many parts of Europe. | |
noun (n.) The serviceable soldiers in a country; an army or any military body, collectively; as, France's effective. | |
adjective (a.) Having the power to produce an effect or effects; producing a decided or decisive effect; efficient; serviceable; operative; as, an effective force, remedy, speech; the effective men in a regiment. |
effectuose | adjective (a.) Alt. of Effectuous |
effeminate | adjective (a.) Having some characteristic of a woman, as delicacy, luxuriousness, etc.; soft or delicate to an unmanly degree; womanish; weak. |
adjective (a.) Womanlike; womanly; tender; -- in a good sense. | |
verb (v. t.) To make womanish; to make soft and delicate; to weaken. | |
verb (v. i.) To grow womanish or weak. |
effervescence | noun (n.) Alt. of Effervescency |
effervescible | adjective (a.) Capable of effervescing. |
effervescive | adjective (a.) Tending to produce effervescence. |
effete | adjective (a.) No longer capable of producing young, as an animal, or fruit, as the earth; hence, worn out with age; exhausted of energy; incapable of efficient action; no longer productive; barren; sterile. |
efficience | noun (n.) Alt. of Efficiency |
efflorescence | noun (n.) Flowering, or state of flowering; the blooming of flowers; blowth. |
noun (n.) A redness of the skin; eruption, as in rash, measles, smallpox, scarlatina, etc. | |
noun (n.) The formation of the whitish powder or crust on the surface of efflorescing bodies, as salts, etc. | |
noun (n.) The powder or crust thus formed. |
effluence | noun (n.) A flowing out, or emanation. |
noun (n.) That which flows or issues from any body or substance; issue; efflux. |
effluviable | adjective (a.) Capable of being given off as an effluvium. |
effrayable | adjective (a.) Frightful. |
effulgence | noun (n.) The state of being effulgent; extreme brilliancy; a flood of light; great luster or brightness; splendor. |
effuse | noun (n.) Effusion; loss. |
adjective (a.) Poured out freely; profuse. | |
adjective (a.) Disposed to pour out freely; prodigal. | |
adjective (a.) Spreading loosely, especially on one side; as, an effuse inflorescence. | |
adjective (a.) Having the lips, or edges, of the aperture abruptly spreading; -- said of certain shells. | |
verb (v. t.) To pour out like a stream or freely; to cause to exude; to shed. | |
verb (v. i.) To emanate; to issue. |
effusive | adjective (a.) Pouring out; pouring forth freely. |
egence | noun (n.) The state of needing, or of suffering a natural want. |
egre | noun (a. & n.) See Eager, and Eagre. |
adjective (a.) Sharp; bitter; acid; sour. |
eglandulose | adjective (a.) Alt. of Eglandulous |
eglantine | noun (n.) A species of rose (Rosa Eglanteria), with fragrant foliage and flowers of various colors. |
noun (n.) The sweetbrier (R. rubiginosa). |
eglatere | noun (n.) Eglantine. |
egranulose | adjective (a.) Having no granules, as chlorophyll in certain conditions. |
egrette | noun (n.) Same as Egret, n., 2. |
egritude | noun (n.) Sickness; ailment; sorrow. |
ehlite | noun (n.) A mineral of a green color and pearly luster; a hydrous phosphate of copper. |
eightetethe | adjective (a.) Eighteenth. |
eightscore | noun (a. & n.) Eight times twenty; a hundred and sixty. |
eigne | adjective (a.) Eldest; firstborn. |
adjective (a.) Entailed; belonging to the eldest son. |
eikosane | noun (n.) A solid hydrocarbon, C20H42, of the paraffine series, of artificial production, and also probably occurring in petroleum. |
eikosylene | noun (n.) A liquid hydrocarbon, C20H38, of the acetylene series, obtained from brown coal. |
eire | noun (n.) Air. |
eirie | noun (n.) See Aerie, and Eyrie. |
eke | noun (n.) An addition. |
verb (v. t.) To increase; to add to; to augment; -- now commonly used with out, the notion conveyed being to add to, or piece out by a laborious, inferior, or scanty addition; as, to eke out a scanty supply of one kind with some other. | |
adverb (adv.) In addition; also; likewise. |
ekebergite | noun (n.) A variety of scapolite. |
ekename | noun (n.) An additional or epithet name; a nickname. |