GENISIS
First name GENISIS's origin is Hebrew. GENISIS means "origin: birth. genisis is the name of the first book in the bible. genisia - the virgin mary of turin - is a protectress invoked against drought in catholic tradition". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with GENISIS below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of genisis.(Brown names are of the same origin (Hebrew) with GENISIS and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming GENISIS
FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES GENİSİS AS A WHOLE:
NAMES RHYMING WITH GENİSİS (According to last letters):
Rhyming Names According to Last 6 Letters (enisis) - Names That Ends with enisis:
Rhyming Names According to Last 5 Letters (nisis) - Names That Ends with nisis:
Rhyming Names According to Last 4 Letters (isis) - Names That Ends with isis:
isisRhyming Names According to Last 3 Letters (sis) - Names That Ends with sis:
eudosis lachesis nemesis persis hausis halithersis genesis jenasis jenesis thanasisRhyming Names According to Last 2 Letters (is) - Names That Ends with is:
garmangabis sulis bilqis lamis lapis memphis theoris thermuthis aldis flordelis aigneis beitris leitis alcestis aleris amaryllis artemis briseis chloris chryseis clematis coronis cypris doris eldoris eris iris lais lilis lycoris lyris metis symaethis thais themis thetis jyotis nokomis busiris damis dassais eblis yunis anis idris rais avedis alis bleoberis maris naois felis kramoris joris amenophis anubis apis apophis onuris osiris serapis willis alois acis adonis aegis attis baucis calais charybdis cleobis daphnis iphis mimis panagiotis takis thamyris tigris vasilis yannis shaithis ailis alexis alyxis amaris anais annis arelis audrisNAMES RHYMING WITH GENİSİS (According to first letters):
Rhyming Names According to First 6 Letters (genisi) - Names That Begins with genisi:
genisiaRhyming Names According to First 5 Letters (genis) - Names That Begins with genis:
genisaRhyming Names According to First 4 Letters (geni) - Names That Begins with geni:
geniveeRhyming Names According to First 3 Letters (gen) - Names That Begins with gen:
genara genaya gene generosa generosb genessa geneva geneve genevie genevieve genevra genevre genevyeve genna genny geno genoveva genowefa gentzaRhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (ge) - Names That Begins with ge:
gear gearald gearoid geary geb gebre gechina gedaliah gedaly gedalya gedalyahu gedeon geedar geela geffrey gehard gelasia gelasius gelban geldersman gelsomina geltruda gemma geoff geoffrey geol geomar geor georg george georges georgeta georgetta georgette georgia georgiana georgine georgitte ger geraghty geraint gerald geraldina geraldine geraldo geralt geralyn geralynn geranium gerard gerardo gerd gerda gerde gerdie gere geremia gergo gerhard gerhardina gerhardine geri gerica gericka gerika gerlach germai germain germaine german germana germano germian gerold geron geronimo gerrald gerrardNAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH GENİSİS:
First Names which starts with 'gen' and ends with 'sis':
First Names which starts with 'ge' and ends with 'is':
gertrudisFirst Names which starts with 'g' and ends with 's':
gaheris gais galinthias garmangahis gertrudes gesnes ghoukas giannes gijs gildas giles gilles glais glaucus golds gorlois gregos griseldis guerehes guiderius gyesEnglish Words Rhyming GENISIS
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES GENİSİS AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH GENİSİS (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 6 Letters (enisis) - English Words That Ends with enisis:
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (nisis) - English Words That Ends with nisis:
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (isis) - English Words That Ends with isis:
anagnorisis | noun (n.) The unfolding or denouement. |
chorisis | noun (n.) The separation of a leaf or floral organ into two more parts. |
crisis | noun (n.) The point of time when it is to be decided whether any affair or course of action must go on, or be modified or terminate; the decisive moment; the turning point. |
noun (n.) That change in a disease which indicates whether the result is to be recovery or death; sometimes, also, a striking change of symptoms attended by an outward manifestation, as by an eruption or sweat. |
isis | noun (n.) The principal goddess worshiped by the Egyptians. She was regarded as the mother of Horus, and the sister and wife of Osiris. The Egyptians adored her as the goddess of fecundity, and as the great benefactress of their country, who instructed their ancestors in the art of agriculture. |
noun (n.) Any coral of the genus Isis, or family Isidae, composed of joints of white, stony coral, alternating with flexible, horny joints. See Gorgoniacea. | |
noun (n.) One of the asteroids. |
metabolisis | noun (n.) Metabolism. |
phthisis | noun (n.) A wasting or consumption of the tissues. The term was formerly applied to many wasting diseases, but is now usually restricted to pulmonary phthisis, or consumption. See Consumption. |
syncrisis | noun (n.) A figure of speech in which opposite things or persons are compared. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (sis) - English Words That Ends with sis:
abassis | noun (n.) A silver coin of Persia, worth about twenty cents. |
abiogenesis | noun (n.) The supposed origination of living organisms from lifeless matter; such genesis as does not involve the action of living parents; spontaneous generation; -- called also abiogeny, and opposed to biogenesis. |
absis | noun (n.) See Apsis. |
aesthesis | noun (n.) Sensuous perception. |
agamogenesis | noun (n.) Reproduction without the union of parents of distinct sexes: asexual reproduction. |
agenesis | noun (n.) Any imperfect development of the body, or any anomaly of organization. |
agennesis | noun (n.) Impotence; sterility. |
amanuensis | noun (n.) A person whose employment is to write what another dictates, or to copy what another has written. |
amaurosis | noun (n.) A loss or decay of sight, from loss of power in the optic nerve, without any perceptible external change in the eye; -- called also gutta serena, the "drop serene" of Milton. |
amphiarthrosis | noun (n.) A form of articulation in which the bones are connected by intervening substance admitting slight motion; symphysis. |
amphigenesis | noun (n.) Sexual generation; amphigony. |
anabasis | noun (n.) A journey or expedition up from the coast, like that of the younger Cyrus into Central Asia, described by Xenophon in his work called "The Anabasis." |
noun (n.) The first period, or increase, of a disease; augmentation. |
anacoenosis | noun (n.) A figure by which a speaker appeals to his hearers or opponents for their opinion on the point in debate. |
anacrusis | noun (n.) A prefix of one or two unaccented syllables to a verse properly beginning with an accented syllable. |
anadiplosis | noun (n.) A repetition of the last word or any prominent word in a sentence or clause, at the beginning of the next, with an adjunct idea; as, "He retained his virtues amidst all his misfortunes -- misfortunes which no prudence could foresee or prevent." |
anaesthesis | noun (n.) See Anaesthesia. |
analysis | noun (n.) A resolution of anything, whether an object of the senses or of the intellect, into its constituent or original elements; an examination of the component parts of a subject, each separately, as the words which compose a sentence, the tones of a tune, or the simple propositions which enter into an argument. It is opposed to synthesis. |
noun (n.) The separation of a compound substance, by chemical processes, into its constituents, with a view to ascertain either (a) what elements it contains, or (b) how much of each element is present. The former is called qualitative, and the latter quantitative analysis. | |
noun (n.) The tracing of things to their source, and the resolving of knowledge into its original principles. | |
noun (n.) The resolving of problems by reducing the conditions that are in them to equations. | |
noun (n.) A syllabus, or table of the principal heads of a discourse, disposed in their natural order. | |
noun (n.) A brief, methodical illustration of the principles of a science. In this sense it is nearly synonymous with synopsis. | |
noun (n.) The process of ascertaining the name of a species, or its place in a system of classification, by means of an analytical table or key. |
anamnesis | noun (n.) A recalling to mind; recollection. |
anamorphosis | noun (n.) A distorted or monstrous projection or representation of an image on a plane or curved surface, which, when viewed from a certain point, or as reflected from a curved mirror or through a polyhedron, appears regular and in proportion; a deformation of an image. |
noun (n.) Same as Anamorphism, 2. | |
noun (n.) A morbid or monstrous development, or change of form, or degeneration. |
anapophysis | noun (n.) An accessory process in many lumbar vertebrae. |
anastomosis | noun (n.) The inosculation of vessels, or intercommunication between two or more vessels or nerves, as the cross communication between arteries or veins. |
anchylosis | noun (n.) Alt. of Ankylosis |
ankylosis | noun (n.) Stiffness or fixation of a joint; formation of a stiff joint. |
noun (n.) The union of two or more separate bones to from a single bone; the close union of bones or other structures in various animals. | |
noun (n.) Same as Anchylosis. |
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. |
anthesis | noun (n.) The period or state of full expansion in a flower. |
anthropomorphosis | noun (n.) Transformation into the form of a human being. |
antimetathesis | noun (n.) An antithesis in which the members are repeated in inverse order. |
antiperistasis | noun (n.) Opposition by which the quality opposed asquires strength; resistance or reaction roused by opposition or by the action of an opposite principle or quality. |
antiphrasis | noun (n.) The use of words in a sense opposite to their proper meaning; as when a court of justice is called a court of vengeance. |
antiptosis | noun (n.) The putting of one case for another. |
antipyresis | noun (n.) The condition or state of being free from fever. |
antithesis | noun (n.) An opposition or contrast of words or sentiments occurring in the same sentence; as, "The prodigal robs his heir; the miser robs himself." "He had covertly shot at Cromwell; he how openly aimed at the Queen." |
noun (n.) The second of two clauses forming an antithesis. | |
noun (n.) Opposition; contrast. |
aparithmesis | noun (n.) Enumeration of parts or particulars. |
aphaeresis | noun (n.) Same as Apheresis. |
apheresis | noun (n.) The dropping of a letter or syllable from the beginning of a word; e. g., cute for acute. |
noun (n.) An operation by which any part is separated from the rest. |
aphesis | noun (n.) The loss of a short unaccented vowel at the beginning of a word; -- the result of a phonetic process; as, squire for esquire. |
apodosis | noun (n.) The consequent clause or conclusion in a conditional sentence, expressing the result, and thus distinguished from the protasis or clause which expresses a condition. Thus, in the sentence, "Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him," the former clause is the protasis, and the latter the apodosis. |
aponeurosis | noun (n.) Any one of the thicker and denser of the deep fasciae which cover, invest, and the terminations and attachments of, many muscles. They often differ from tendons only in being flat and thin. See Fascia. |
apophasis | noun (n.) A figure by which a speaker formally declines to take notice of a favorable point, but in such a manner as to produce the effect desired. [For example, see Mark Antony's oration. Shak., Julius Caesar, iii. 2.] |
apophysis | noun (n.) A marked prominence or process on any part of a bone. |
noun (n.) An enlargement at the top of a pedicel or stem, as seen in certain mosses. |
aposiopesis | noun (n.) A figure of speech in which the speaker breaks off suddenly, as if unwilling or unable to state what was in his mind; as, "I declare to you that his conduct -- but I can not speak of that, here." |
apotheosis | noun (n. pl.) The act of elevating a mortal to the rank of, and placing him among, "the gods;" deification. |
noun (n. pl.) Glorification; exaltation. |
apothesis | noun (n.) A place on the south side of the chancel in the primitive churches, furnished with shelves, for books, vestments, etc. |
noun (n.) A dressing room connected with a public bath. |
apsis | noun (n.) One of the two points of an orbit, as of a planet or satellite, which are at the greatest and least distance from the central body, corresponding to the aphelion and perihelion of a planet, or to the apogee and perigee of the moon. The more distant is called the higher apsis; the other, the lower apsis; and the line joining them, the line of apsides. |
noun (n.) In a curve referred to polar coordinates, any point for which the radius vector is a maximum or minimum. | |
noun (n.) Same as Apse. |
archebiosis | noun (n.) The origination of living matter from non-living. See Abiogenesis. |
arsis | noun (n.) That part of a foot where the ictus is put, or which is distinguished from the rest (known as the thesis) of the foot by a greater stress of voice. |
noun (n.) That elevation of voice now called metrical accentuation, or the rhythmic accent. | |
noun (n.) The elevation of the hand, or that part of the bar at which it is raised, in beating time; the weak or unaccented part of the bar; -- opposed to thesis. |
arthrosis | noun (n.) Articulation. |
athetosis | noun (n.) A variety of chorea, marked by peculiar tremors of the fingers and toes. |
atmolysis | noun (n.) The act or process of separating mingled gases of unequal diffusibility by transmission through porous substances. |
autogenesis | noun (n.) Spontaneous generation. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH GENİSİS (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 6 Letters (genisi) - Words That Begins with genisi:
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (genis) - Words That Begins with genis:
genista | noun (n.) A genus of plants including the common broom of Western Europe. |
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (geni) - Words That Begins with geni:
genial | adjective (a.) Same as Genian. |
adjective (a.) Contributing to, or concerned in, propagation or production; generative; procreative; productive. | |
adjective (a.) Contributing to, and sympathizing with, the enjoyment of life; sympathetically cheerful and cheering; jovial and inspiring joy or happiness; exciting pleasure and sympathy; enlivening; kindly; as, she was of a cheerful and genial disposition. | |
adjective (a.) Belonging to one's genius or natural character; native; natural; inborn. | |
adjective (a.) Denoting or marked with genius; belonging to the higher nature. |
geniality | noun (n.) The quality of being genial; sympathetic cheerfulness; warmth of disposition and manners. |
genialness | noun (n.) The quality of being genial. |
genian | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the chin; mental; as, the genian prominence. |
geniculate | adjective (a.) Bent abruptly at an angle, like the knee when bent; as, a geniculate stem; a geniculate ganglion; a geniculate twin crystal. |
verb (v. t.) To form joints or knots on. |
geniculating | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Geniculate |
geniculated | adjective (a.) Same as Geniculate. |
(imp. & p. p.) of Geniculate |
geniculation | noun (n.) The act of kneeling. |
noun (n.) The state of being bent abruptly at an angle. |
genie | noun (n.) See Genius. |
genio | noun (n.) A man of a particular turn of mind. |
geniohyoid | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the chin and hyoid bone; as, the geniohyoid muscle. |
genipap | noun (n.) The edible fruit of a West Indian tree (Genipa Americana) of the order Rubiaceae. It is oval in shape, as a large as a small orange, of a pale greenish color, and with dark purple juice. |
genital | adjective (a.) Pertaining to generation, or to the generative organs. |
genitals | adjective (a.) The organs of generation; the sexual organs; the private parts. |
geniting | noun (n.) A species of apple that ripens very early. |
genitival | adjective (a.) Possessing genitive from; pertaining to, or derived from, the genitive case; as, a genitival adverb. |
genitive | noun (n.) The genitive case. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to that case (as the second case of Latin and Greek nouns) which expresses source or possession. It corresponds to the possessive case in English. |
genitocrural | adjective (a.) Pertaining to the genital organs and the thigh; -- applied especially to one of the lumbar nerves. |
genitor | noun (n.) One who begets; a generator; an originator. |
noun (n.) The genitals. |
genitourinary | adjective (a.) See Urogenital. |
geniture | noun (n.) Generation; procreation; birth. |
genius | noun (n.) A good or evil spirit, or demon, supposed by the ancients to preside over a man's destiny in life; a tutelary deity; a supernatural being; a spirit, good or bad. Cf. Jinnee. |
noun (n.) The peculiar structure of mind with whoch each individual is endowed by nature; that disposition or aptitude of mind which is peculiar to each man, and which qualifies him for certain kinds of action or special success in any pursuit; special taste, inclination, or disposition; as, a genius for history, for poetry, or painting. | |
noun (n.) Peculiar character; animating spirit, as of a nation, a religion, a language. | |
noun (n.) Distinguished mental superiority; uncommon intellectual power; especially, superior power of invention or origination of any kind, or of forming new combinations; as, a man of genius. | |
noun (n.) A man endowed with uncommon vigor of mind; a man of superior intellectual faculties; as, Shakespeare was a rare genius. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (gen) - Words That Begins with gen:
genappe | noun (n.) A worsted yarn or cord of peculiar smoothness, used in the manufacture of braid, fringe, etc. |
gendarme | noun (n.) One of a body of heavy cavalry. |
noun (n.) An armed policeman in France. |
gendarmery | noun (n.) The body of gendarmes. |
gender | noun (n.) Kind; sort. |
noun (n.) Sex, male or female. | |
noun (n.) A classification of nouns, primarily according to sex; and secondarily according to some fancied or imputed quality associated with sex. | |
noun (n.) To beget; to engender. | |
verb (v. i.) To copulate; to breed. |
gendering | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Gender |
genderless | adjective (a.) Having no gender. |
geneagenesis | noun (n.) Alternate generation. See under Generation. |
genealogic | adjective (a.) Genealogical. |
genealogical | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to genealogy; as, a genealogical table; genealogical order. |
genealogist | noun (n.) One who traces genealogies or the descent of persons or families. |
genealogy | noun (n.) An account or history of the descent of a person or family from an ancestor; enumeration of ancestors and their children in the natural order of succession; a pedigree. |
noun (n.) Regular descent of a person or family from a progenitor; pedigree; lineage. |
genearch | noun (n.) The chief of a family or tribe. |
genera | noun (n. pl.) See Genus. |
(pl. ) of Genus |
generability | noun (n.) Capability of being generated. |
generable | adjective (a.) Capable of being generated or produced. |
general | adjective (a.) Relating to a genus or kind; pertaining to a whole class or order; as, a general law of animal or vegetable economy. |
adjective (a.) Comprehending many species or individuals; not special or particular; including all particulars; as, a general inference or conclusion. | |
adjective (a.) Not restrained or limited to a precise import; not specific; vague; indefinite; lax in signification; as, a loose and general expression. | |
adjective (a.) Common to many, or the greatest number; widely spread; prevalent; extensive, though not universal; as, a general opinion; a general custom. | |
adjective (a.) Having a relation to all; common to the whole; as, Adam, our general sire. | |
adjective (a.) As a whole; in gross; for the most part. | |
adjective (a.) Usual; common, on most occasions; as, his general habit or method. | |
adjective (a.) The whole; the total; that which comprehends or relates to all, or the chief part; -- opposed to particular. | |
adjective (a.) One of the chief military officers of a government or country; the commander of an army, of a body of men not less than a brigade. In European armies, the highest military rank next below field marshal. | |
adjective (a.) The roll of the drum which calls the troops together; as, to beat the general. | |
adjective (a.) The chief of an order of monks, or of all the houses or congregations under the same rule. | |
adjective (a.) The public; the people; the vulgar. |
generalia | noun (n. pl.) Generalities; general terms. |
generalissimo | adjective (a.) The chief commander of an army; especially, the commander in chief of an army consisting of two or more grand divisions under separate commanders; -- a title used in most foreign countries. |
generality | noun (n.) The state of being general; the quality of including species or particulars. |
noun (n.) That which is general; that which lacks specificalness, practicalness, or application; a general or vague statement or phrase. | |
noun (n.) The main body; the bulk; the greatest part; as, the generality of a nation, or of mankind. |
generalizable | adjective (a.) Capable of being generalized, or reduced to a general form of statement, or brought under a general rule. |
generalization | noun (n.) The act or process of generalizing; the act of bringing individuals or particulars under a genus or class; deduction of a general principle from particulars. |
noun (n.) A general inference. |
generalizing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Generalize |
generalized | adjective (a.) Comprising structural characters which are separated in more specialized forms; synthetic; as, a generalized type. |
(imp. & p. p.) of Generalize |
generalizer | noun (n.) One who takes general or comprehensive views. |
generalness | noun (n.) The condition or quality of being general; frequency; commonness. |
generalship | noun (n.) The office of a general; the exercise of the functions of a general; -- sometimes, with the possessive pronoun, the personality of a general. |
noun (n.) Military skill in a general officer or commander. | |
noun (n.) Fig.: Leadership; management. |
generalty | noun (n.) Generality. |
generant | noun (n.) That which generates. |
noun (n.) A generatrix. | |
adjective (a.) Generative; producing | |
adjective (a.) acting as a generant. |
generating | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Generate |
generation | noun (n.) The act of generating or begetting; procreation, as of animals. |
noun (n.) Origination by some process, mathematical, chemical, or vital; production; formation; as, the generation of sounds, of gases, of curves, etc. | |
noun (n.) That which is generated or brought forth; progeny; offspiring. | |
noun (n.) A single step or stage in the succession of natural descent; a rank or remove in genealogy. Hence: The body of those who are of the same genealogical rank or remove from an ancestor; the mass of beings living at one period; also, the average lifetime of man, or the ordinary period of time at which one rank follows another, or father is succeeded by child, usually assumed to be one third of a century; an age. | |
noun (n.) Race; kind; family; breed; stock. | |
noun (n.) The formation or production of any geometrical magnitude, as a line, a surface, a solid, by the motion, in accordance with a mathematical law, of a point or a magnitude; as, the generation of a line or curve by the motion of a point, of a surface by a line, a sphere by a semicircle, etc. | |
noun (n.) The aggregate of the functions and phenomene which attend reproduction. |
generative | adjective (a.) Having the power of generating, propagating, originating, or producing. |
generator | noun (n.) One who, or that which, generates, begets, causes, or produces. |
noun (n.) An apparatus in which vapor or gas is formed from a liquid or solid by means of heat or chemical process, as a steam boiler, gas retort, or vessel for generating carbonic acid gas, etc. | |
noun (n.) The principal sound or sounds by which others are produced; the fundamental note or root of the common chord; -- called also generating tone. | |
noun (n.) Any machine that transforms mechanical into electrical energy; a dynamo. |
generatrix | noun (n.) That which generates; the point, or the mathematical magnitude, which, by its motion, generates another magnitude, as a line, surface, or solid; -- called also describent. |
generic | adjective (a.) Alt. of Generical |
generical | adjective (a.) Pertaining to a genus or kind; relating to a genus, as distinct from a species, or from another genus; as, a generic description; a generic difference; a generic name. |
adjective (a.) Very comprehensive; pertaining or appropriate to large classes or their characteristics; -- opposed to specific. |
genericalness | noun (n.) The quality of being generic. |
generification | noun (n.) The act or process of generalizing. |
generosity | noun (n.) Noble birth. |
noun (n.) The quality of being noble; noble-mindedness. | |
noun (n.) Liberality in giving; munificence. |
generous | adjective (a.) Of honorable birth or origin; highborn. |
adjective (a.) Exhibiting those qualities which are popularly reregarded as belonging to high birth; noble; honorable; magnanimous; spirited; courageous. | |
adjective (a.) Open-handed; free to give; not close or niggardly; munificent; as, a generous friend or father. | |
adjective (a.) Characterized by generosity; abundant; overflowing; as, a generous table. | |
adjective (a.) Full of spirit or strength; stimulating; exalting; as, generous wine. |
genesial | adjective (a.) Of or relating to generation. |
genesiolgy | noun (n.) The doctrine or science of generation. |
genesis | noun (n.) The act of producing, or giving birth or origin to anything; the process or mode of originating; production; formation; origination. |
noun (n.) The first book of the Old Testament; -- so called by the Greek translators, from its containing the history of the creation of the world and of the human race. | |
noun (n.) Same as Generation. |
genet | noun (n.) Alt. of Genette |
noun (n.) A small-sized, well-proportioned, Spanish horse; a jennet. |
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. |
genethliac | noun (n.) A birthday poem. |
noun (n.) One skilled in genethliacs. | |
adjective (a.) Pertaining to nativities; calculated by astrologers; showing position of stars at one's birth. |
genethliacal | adjective (a.) Genethliac. |
genethliacs | noun (n.) The science of calculating nativities, or predicting the future events of life from the stars which preside at birth. |
genethlialogy | noun (n.) Divination as to the destinies of one newly born; the act or art of casting nativities; astrology. |
genethliatic | noun (n.) One who calculates nativities. |
genetic | adjective (a.) Same as Genetical. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH GENİSİS:
English Words which starts with 'gen' and ends with 'sis':
English Words which starts with 'ge' and ends with 'is':
geognosis | noun (n.) Knowledge of the earth. |