First Names Rhyming JENESIS
English Words Rhyming JENESIS
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES JENESİS AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH JENESİS (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 6 Letters (enesis) - English Words That Ends with enesis:
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. |
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. |
amphigenesis | noun (n.) Sexual generation; amphigony. |
autogenesis | noun (n.) Spontaneous generation. |
amylogenesis | noun (n.) The formation of starch. |
biogenesis | noun (n.) Alt. of Biogeny |
blastogenesis | noun (n.) Multiplication or increase by gemmation or budding. |
chondrogenesis | noun (n.) The development of cartilage. |
cytogenesis | noun (n.) Development of cells in animal and vegetable organisms. See Gemmation, Budding, Karyokinesis; also Cell development, under Cell. |
digenesis | noun (n.) The faculty of multiplying in two ways; -- by ova fecundated by spermatic fluid, and asexually, as by buds. See Parthenogenesis. |
dysgenesis | noun (n.) A condition of not generating or breeding freely; infertility; a form homogenesis in which the hybrids are sterile among themselves, but are fertile with members of either parent race. |
electrogenesis | noun (n.) Same as Electrogeny. |
endogenesis | noun (n.) Endogeny. |
epigenesis | noun (n.) The theory of generation which holds that the germ is created entirely new, not merely expanded, by the procreative power of the parents. It is opposed to the theory of evolution, also to syngenesis. |
eugenesis | noun (n.) The quality or condition of having strong reproductive powers; generation with full fertility between different species or races, specif. between hybrids of the first generation. |
gamogenesis | noun (n.) The production of offspring by the union of parents of different sexes; sexual reproduction; -- the opposite of agamogenesis. |
geneagenesis | noun (n.) Alternate generation. See under 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. |
glucogenesis | noun (n.) Glycogenesis. |
glycogenesis | noun (n.) The production or formation of sugar from gycogen, as in the liver. |
haematogenesis | noun (n.) The origin and development of blood. |
| noun (n.) The transformation of venous arterial blood by respiration; hematosis. |
henogenesis | noun (n.) Same as Ontogeny. |
heterogenesis | noun (n.) Spontaneous generation, so called. |
| noun (n.) That method of reproduction in which the successive generations differ from each other, the parent organism producing offspring different in habit and structure from itself, the original form, however, reappearing after one or more generations; -- opposed to homogenesis, or gamogenesis. |
histogenesis | noun (n.) The formation and development of organic tissues; histogeny; -- the opposite of histolysis. |
| noun (n.) Germ history of cells, and of the tissues composed of cells. |
homogenesis | noun (n.) That method of reproduction in which the successive generations are alike, the offspring, either animal or plant, running through the same cycle of existence as the parent; gamogenesis; -- opposed to heterogenesis. |
kenogenesis | noun (n.) Modified evolution, in which nonprimitive characters make their appearance in consequence of a secondary adaptation of the embryo to the peculiar conditions of its environment; -- distinguished from palingenesis. |
kinetogenesis | noun (n.) An instrument for producing curves by the combination of circular movements; -- called also kinescope. |
leucocytogenesis | noun (n.) The formation of leucocytes. |
metagenesis | noun (n.) The change of form which one animal species undergoes in a series of successively produced individuals, extending from the one developed from the ovum to the final perfected individual. Hence, metagenesis involves the production of sexual individuals by nonsexual means, either directly or through intervening sexless generations. Opposed to monogenesis. See Alternate generation, under Generation. |
| noun (n.) Alternation of sexual and asexual or gemmiparous generations; -- in distinction from heterogamy. |
monogenesis | noun (n.) Oneness of origin; esp. (Biol.), development of all beings in the universe from a single cell; -- opposed to polygenesis. Called also monism. |
| noun (n.) That form of reproduction which requires but one parent, as in reproduction by fission or in the formation of buds, etc., which drop off and form new individuals; asexual reproduction. |
| noun (n.) The direct development of an embryo, without metamorphosis, into an organism similar to the parent organism; -- opposed to metagenesis. |
ontogenesis | noun (n.) Alt. of Ontogeny |
oogenesis | noun (n.) The development, or mode of origin, of the ova. |
organogenesis | noun (n.) The origin and development of organs in animals and plants. |
| noun (n.) The germ history of the organs and systems of organs, -- a branch of morphogeny. |
osteogenesis | noun (n.) Alt. of Osteogeny |
paedogenesis | noun (n.) Reproduction by young or larval animals. |
palingenesis | noun (n.) Alt. of Palingenesy |
pangenesis | noun (n.) An hypothesis advanced by Darwin in explanation of heredity. |
paragenesis | noun (n.) The science which treats of minerals with special reference to their origin. |
| noun (n.) The formation of minerals in contact, so as to affect one another's development. |
| noun (n.) The order in which minerals occurring together in rocks and veins have developed. |
parenesis | noun (n.) Exhortation. |
parthenogenesis | noun (n.) The production of new individuals from virgin females by means of ova which have the power of developing without the intervention of the male element; the production, without fertilization, of cells capable of germination. It is one of the phenomena of alternate generation. Cf. Heterogamy, and Metagenesis. |
| noun (n.) The production of seed without fertilization, believed to occur through the nonsexual formation of an embryo extraneous to the embrionic vesicle. |
pathogenesis | noun (n.) Pathogeny. |
perigenesis | noun (n.) A theory which explains inheritance by the transmission of the type of growth force possessed by one generation to another. |
phylogenesis | noun (n.) Alt. of Phylogeny |
phytogenesis | noun (n.) Alt. of Phytogeny |
polygenesis | noun (n.) Alt. of Polygeny |
psychogenesis | noun (n.) Genesis through an internal force, as opposed to natural selection. |
regenesis | noun (n.) New birth; renewal. |
schizogenesis | noun (n.) Reproduction by fission. |
spermatogenesis | noun (n.) The development of the spermatozoids. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (nesis) - English Words That Ends with nesis:
agennesis | noun (n.) Impotence; sterility. |
anamnesis | noun (n.) A recalling to mind; recollection. |
autokinesis | noun (n.) Spontaneous or voluntary movement; movement due to an internal cause. |
ecphonesis | noun (n.) An animated or passionate exclamation. |
hyperkinesis | noun (n.) Abnormally increased muscular movement; spasm. |
karyokinesis | noun (n.) The indirect division of cells in which, prior to division of the cell protoplasm, complicated changes take place in the nucleus, attended with movement of the nuclear fibrils; -- opposed to karyostenosis. The nucleus becomes enlarged and convoluted, and finally the threads are separated into two groups which ultimately become disconnected and constitute the daughter nuclei. Called also mitosis. See Cell development, under Cell. |
sporogenesis | noun (n.) reproduction by spores. |
synecphonesis | noun (n.) A contraction of two syllables into one; synizesis. |
syngenesis | noun (n.) A theory of generation in which each germ is supposed to contain the germs of all subsequent generations; -- the opposite of epigenesis. |
synesis | noun (n.) A construction in which adherence to some element in the sense causes a departure from strict syntax, as in "Philip went down to Samaria and preached Christ unto them." |
xenogenesis | noun (n.) Same as Heterogenesis. |
| noun (n.) The fancied production of an organism of one kind by an organism of another. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (esis) - English Words That Ends with esis:
aesthesis | noun (n.) Sensuous perception. |
anaesthesis | noun (n.) See Anaesthesia. |
anthesis | noun (n.) The period or state of full expansion in a flower. |
antimetathesis | noun (n.) An antithesis in which the members are repeated in inverse order. |
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. |
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." |
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. |
auxesis | noun (n.) A figure by which a grave and magnificent word is put for the proper word; amplification; hyperbole. |
arthrodesis | noun (n.) Surgical fixation of joints. |
catachresis | noun (n.) A figure by which one word is wrongly put for another, or by which a word is wrested from its true signification; as, "To take arms against a sea of troubles". Shak. "Her voice was but the shadow of a sound." Young. |
coenesthesis | noun (n.) Common sensation or general sensibility, as distinguished from the special sensations which are located in, or ascribed to, separate organs, as the eye and ear. It is supposed to depend on the ganglionic system. |
chemosynthesis | noun (n.) Synthesis of organic compounds by energy derived from chemical changes or reactions. Chemosynthesis of carbohydrates occurs in the nitrite bacteria through the oxidation of ammonia to nitrous acid, and in the nitrate bacteria through the conversion of nitrous into nitric acid. |
deesis | noun (n.) An invocation of, or address to, the Supreme Being. |
diaeresis | noun (n.) Alt. of Dieresis |
dieresis | noun (n.) The separation or resolution of one syllable into two; -- the opposite of synaeresis. |
| noun (n.) A mark consisting of two dots [/], placed over the second of two adjacent vowels, to denote that they are to be pronounced as distinct letters; as, cooperate, aerial. |
| noun (n.) Same as Diaeresis. |
diapedesis | noun (n.) The passage of the corpuscular elements of the blood from the blood vessels into the surrounding tissues, without rupture of the walls of the blood vessels. |
diaphoresis | noun (n.) Perspiration, or an increase of perspiration. |
diathesis | noun (n.) Bodily condition or constitution, esp. a morbid habit which predisposes to a particular disease, or class of diseases. |
diegesis | noun (n.) A narrative or history; a recital or relation. |
diesis | noun (n.) A small interval, less than any in actual practice, but used in the mathematical calculation of intervals. |
| noun (n.) The mark /; -- called also double dagger. |
diuresis | noun (n.) Free excretion of urine. |
emesis | noun (n.) A vomiting. |
empyesis | noun (n.) An eruption of pustules. |
enuresis | noun (n.) An involuntary discharge of urine; incontinence of urine. |
epenthesis | noun (n.) The insertion of a letter or a sound in the body of a word; as, the b in "nimble" from AS. n/mol. |
epexegesis | noun (n.) A full or additional explanation; exegesis. |
epithesis | noun (n.) The addition of a letter at the end of a word, without changing its sense; as, numb for num, whilst for whiles. |
erotesis | noun (n.) A figure o/ speech by which a strong affirmation of the contrary, is implied under the form o/ an earnest interrogation, as in the following lines; - |
exaeresis | noun (n.) In old writers, the operations concerned in the removal of parts of the body. |
exanthesis | noun (n.) An eruption of the skin; cutaneous efflorescence. |
exegesis | noun (n.) Exposition; explanation; especially, a critical explanation of a text or portion of Scripture. |
| noun (n.) The process of finding the roots of an equation. |
haematemesis | noun (n.) Same as Hematemesis. |
hematemesis | noun (n.) A vomiting of blood. |
heterauxesis | noun (n.) Unequal growth of a cell, or of a part of a plant. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH JENESİS (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 6 Letters (jenesi) - Words That Begins with jenesi:
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (jenes) - Words That Begins with jenes:
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (jene) - Words That Begins with jene:
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (jen) - Words That Begins with jen:
jeniquen | noun (n.) A Mexican name for the Sisal hemp (Agave rigida, var. Sisalana); also, its fiber. |
jenite | noun (n.) See Yenite. |
jenkins | noun (n.) name of contempt for a flatterer of persons high in social or official life; as, the Jenkins employed by a newspaper. |
jennet | noun (n.) A small Spanish horse; a genet. |
jenneting | noun (n.) A variety of early apple. See Juneating. |
jenny | noun (n.) A familiar or pet form of the proper name Jane. |
| noun (n.) A familiar name of the European wren. |
| noun (n.) A machine for spinning a number of threads at once, -- used in factories. |
jentling | noun (n.) A fish of the genus Leuciscus; the blue chub of the Danube. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH JENESİS:
English Words which starts with 'jen' and ends with 'sis':
English Words which starts with 'je' and ends with 'is':