MAITE
First name MAITE's origin is English. MAITE means "dearly loved". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with MAITE below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of maite.(Brown names are of the same origin (English) with MAITE and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming MAITE
FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES MAİTE AS A WHOLE:
maitea maitenaNAMES RHYMING WITH MAİTE (According to last letters):
Rhyming Names According to Last 4 Letters (aite) - Names That Ends with aite:
taite waiteRhyming Names According to Last 3 Letters (ite) - Names That Ends with ite:
amphitrite aphrodite amite brite davite enite kannelite marguerite raditeRhyming Names According to Last 2 Letters (te) - Names That Ends with te:
amanishakhete linette florete maledysaunte tote suette annemette bergitte astarte rute agate bradamate huette josette pierrette yolette bernadette anaxarete arete ate calliste fate hippolyte ocypete tienette vedette volante dete manute baptiste mette dante wambli-waste adette amette anate anjanette anjeanette annette annjeanette antoinette araminte argante ariette ariste arlette babette bemadette bernette bette birte bridgette brigette brigitte cate celeste chante chariste charlette charlotte chaunte clarette colette collette comforte danette dawnette diamante elberte ellette evette georgette georgitte ginnette hanriette harriette hecate hugette hughette idette ivette jaenette janette jaquenette jeanette jenette johnette jonette julietteNAMES RHYMING WITH MAİTE (According to first letters):
Rhyming Names According to First 4 Letters (mait) - Names That Begins with mait:
maitane maiti maitilda maitilde maitlandRhyming Names According to First 3 Letters (mai) - Names That Begins with mai:
mai mai-ron maia maialen maiana maibe maible maichail maida maidel maidie maiele maighdlin maiju maikki maile mailhairer maille mailsi maimun mainchin maiolaine maipe maira maire mairead mairearad mairghread mairi mairia mairin mairona maisie maisy maiya maizahRhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (ma) - Names That Begins with ma:
ma'isah ma'mun ma'n maahes maarouf maat mab mabbina mabel mabelle mabina mable mabon mabonagrain mabonaqain mabuz mabyn mac maca macadam macadhamh macaire macala macaladair macalister macalpin macalpine macandrew macario macartan macarthur macartur macaulay macauliffe macauslan macawi macayla macayle macbain macbean macbeth macbride maccallum macclennan maccoll maccormack maccus macdaibhidh macdhubh macdomhnall macdonald macdonell macdougal macdoughall macdubhgall macduff mace macee macelroyNAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH MAİTE:
First Names which starts with 'ma' and ends with 'te':
manette mariette mate mayteFirst Names which starts with 'm' and ends with 'e':
macfarlane macfie macie mackaylie mackenzie mackinzie mackynsie maclaine maclane macquarrie macrae madale madalene madalyne maddalene maddie maddisynne maddy-rose madelaine madeleine madelene madeline madge madie madntyre madre mae maelee maelwine maerewine maethelwine maetthere maeve mafuane magaere magaskawee magdalene magee maggie magnilde mahpee makaela-marie makahlie makale makawee makenzie maldue malene malerie malleville mallorie malmuirie malone malvine mamie mandie mane manneville mannie manville maolmuire maoltuile marce marceline marcelle marchelle mare maree margarethe margawse margerie mariamne mariane marianne maribelle marie marie-joie marieanne mariele marielle marilee marise marjolaine marlaine marlayne marleene marlene marlenne marlie marline marlise marlowe marmee marque marquise marrayeEnglish Words Rhyming MAITE
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES MAİTE AS A WHOLE:
lamaite | noun (n.) One who believes in Lamaism. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH MAİTE (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (aite) - English Words That Ends with aite:
calaite | noun (n.) A mineral. See Turquoise. |
danaite | noun (n.) A cobaltiferous variety of arsenopyrite. |
elcesaite | noun (n.) One of a sect of Asiatic Gnostics of the time of the Emperor Trajan. |
fassaite | noun (n.) A variety of pyroxene, from the valley of Fassa, in the Tyrol. |
ilvaite | noun (n.) A silicate of iron and lime occurring in black prismatic crystals and columnar masses. |
karaite | noun (n.) A sect of Jews who adhere closely to the letter of the Scriptures, rejecting the oral law, and allowing the Talmud no binding authority; -- opposed to the Rabbinists. |
sarabaite | noun (n.) One of certain vagrant or heretical Oriental monks in the early church. |
thwaite | noun (n.) The twaite. |
noun (n.) Forest land cleared, and converted to tillage; an assart. |
twaite | noun (n.) A European shad; -- called also twaite shad. See Shad. |
noun (n.) A piece of cleared ground. See Thwaite. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (ite) - English Words That Ends with ite:
abderite | noun (n.) An inhabitant of Abdera, in Thrace. |
abelite | noun (n.) Alt. of Abelonian |
abietite | noun (n.) A substance resembling mannite, found in the needles of the common silver fir of Europe (Abies pectinata). |
aciculite | noun (n.) Needle ore. |
aconite | noun (n.) The herb wolfsbane, or monkshood; -- applied to any plant of the genus Aconitum (tribe Hellebore), all the species of which are poisonous. |
noun (n.) An extract or tincture obtained from Aconitum napellus, used as a poison and medicinally. |
acquisite | adjective (a.) Acquired. |
acrite | adjective (a.) Acritan. |
actinolite | noun (n.) A bright green variety of amphibole occurring usually in fibrous or columnar masses. |
adamite | noun (n.) A descendant of Adam; a human being. |
noun (n.) One of a sect of visionaries, who, professing to imitate the state of Adam, discarded the use of dress in their assemblies. |
adiaphorite | noun (n.) Same as Adiaphorist. |
aerolite | noun (n.) A stone, or metallic mass, which has fallen to the earth from distant space; a meteorite; a meteoric stone. |
aerosiderite | noun (n.) A mass of meteoric iron. |
afrite | noun (n.) Alt. of Afreet |
agalmatolite | noun (n.) A soft, compact stone, of a grayish, greenish, or yellowish color, carved into images by the Chinese, and hence called figure stone, and pagodite. It is probably a variety of pinite. |
albertite | noun (n.) A bituminous mineral resembling asphaltum, found in the county of A. /bert, New Brunswick. |
albite | noun (n.) A mineral of the feldspar family, triclinic in crystallization, and in composition a silicate of alumina and soda. It is a common constituent of granite and of various igneous rocks. See Feldspar. |
allanite | noun (n.) A silicate containing a large amount of cerium. It is usually black in color, opaque, and is related to epidote in form and composition. |
allochroite | noun (n.) See Garnet. |
alunite | noun (n.) Alum stone. |
amazonite | noun (n.) Alt. of Amazon stone |
ambrite | noun (n.) A fossil resin occurring in large masses in New Zealand. |
ammite | noun (n.) Oolite or roestone; -- written also hammite. |
ammonite | noun (n.) A fossil cephalopod shell related to the nautilus. There are many genera and species, and all are extinct, the typical forms having existed only in the Mesozoic age, when they were exceedingly numerous. They differ from the nautili in having the margins of the septa very much lobed or plaited, and the siphuncle dorsal. Also called serpent stone, snake stone, and cornu Ammonis. |
ampelite | noun (n.) An earth abounding in pyrites, used by the ancients to kill insects, etc., on vines; -- applied by Brongniart to a carbonaceous alum schist. |
analcite | noun (n.) Analcime. |
anchorite | noun (n.) One who renounces the world and secludes himself, usually for religious reasons; a hermit; a recluse. |
noun (n.) Same as Anchoret. |
andalusite | noun (n.) A silicate of aluminium, occurring usually in thick rhombic prisms, nearly square, of a grayish or pale reddish tint. It was first discovered in Andalusia, Spain. |
andesite | noun (n.) An eruptive rock allied to trachyte, consisting essentially of a triclinic feldspar, with pyroxene, hornblende, or hypersthene. |
anglesite | noun (n.) A native sulphate of lead. It occurs in white or yellowish transparent, prismatic crystals. |
anhydrite | noun (n.) A mineral of a white or a slightly bluish color, usually massive. It is anhydrous sulphate of lime, and differs from gypsum in not containing water (whence the name). |
ankerite | noun (n.) A mineral closely related to dolomite, but containing iron. |
anorthite | noun (n.) A mineral of the feldspar family, commonly occurring in small glassy crystals, also a constituent of some igneous rocks. It is a lime feldspar. See Feldspar. |
antholite | noun (n.) A fossil plant, like a petrified flower. |
anthophyllite | noun (n.) A mineral of the hornblende group, of a yellowish gray or clove brown color. |
anthracite | noun (n.) A hard, compact variety of mineral coal, of high luster, differing from bituminous coal in containing little or no bitumen, in consequence of which it burns with a nearly non luminous flame. The purer specimens consist almost wholly of carbon. Also called glance coal and blind coal. |
anthraconite | noun (n.) A coal-black marble, usually emitting a fetid smell when rubbed; -- called also stinkstone and swinestone. |
anthropolite | noun (n.) A petrifaction of the human body, or of any portion of it. |
anthropomorphite | noun (n.) One who ascribes a human form or human attributes to the Deity or to a polytheistic deity. Taylor. Specifically, one of a sect of ancient heretics who believed that God has a human form, etc. Tillotson. |
anthropophagite | noun (n.) A cannibal. |
antimonite | noun (n.) A compound of antimonious acid and a base or basic radical. |
noun (n.) Stibnite. |
apatite | noun (n.) Native phosphate of lime, occurring usually in six-sided prisms, color often pale green, transparent or translucent. |
aphanite | noun (n.) A very compact, dark-colored /ock, consisting of hornblende, or pyroxene, and feldspar, but neither of them in perceptible grains. |
aphrite | noun (n.) See under Calcite. |
aphrodite | noun (n.) The Greek goddess of love, corresponding to the Venus of the Romans. |
noun (n.) A large marine annelid, covered with long, lustrous, golden, hairlike setae; the sea mouse. | |
noun (n.) A beautiful butterfly (Argunnis Aphrodite) of the United States. |
apophyllite | noun (n.) A mineral relating to the zeolites, usually occurring in square prisms or octahedrons with pearly luster on the cleavage surface. It is a hydrous silicate of calcium and potassium. |
apotactite | noun (n.) One of a sect of ancient Christians, who, in supposed imitation of the first believers, renounced all their possessions. |
appetite | noun (n.) The desire for some personal gratification, either of the body or of the mind. |
noun (n.) Desire for, or relish of, food or drink; hunger. | |
noun (n.) Any strong desire; an eagerness or longing. | |
noun (n.) Tendency; appetency. | |
noun (n.) The thing desired. |
apposite | adjective (a.) Very applicable; well adapted; suitable or fit; relevant; pat; -- followed by to; as, this argument is very apposite to the case. |
aragonite | noun (n.) A mineral identical in composition with calcite or carbonate of lime, but differing from it in its crystalline form and some of its physical characters. |
archimandrite | noun (n.) A chief of a monastery, corresponding to abbot in the Roman Catholic church. |
noun (n.) A superintendent of several monasteries, corresponding to superior abbot, or father provincial, in the Roman Catholic church. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH MAİTE (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (mait) - Words That Begins with mait:
maithes | noun (n.) Same as Maghet. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (mai) - Words That Begins with mai:
maia | noun (n.) A genus of spider crabs, including the common European species (Maia squinado). |
noun (n.) A beautiful American bombycid moth (Eucronia maia). |
maian | noun (n.) Any spider crab of the genus Maia, or family Maiadae. |
maid | noun (n.) An unmarried woman; usually, a young unmarried woman; esp., a girl; a virgin; a maiden. |
noun (n.) A man who has not had sexual intercourse. | |
noun (n.) A female servant. | |
noun (n.) The female of a ray or skate, esp. of the gray skate (Raia batis), and of the thornback (R. clavata). |
maiden | noun (n.) An unmarried woman; a girl or woman who has not experienced sexual intercourse; a virgin; a maid. |
noun (n.) A female servant. | |
noun (n.) An instrument resembling the guillotine, formerly used in Scotland for beheading criminals. | |
noun (n.) A machine for washing linen. | |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to a maiden, or to maidens; suitable to, or characteristic of, a virgin; as, maiden innocence. | |
adjective (a.) Never having been married; not having had sexual intercourse; virgin; -- said usually of the woman, but sometimes of the man; as, a maiden aunt. | |
adjective (a.) Fresh; innocent; unpolluted; pure; hitherto unused. | |
adjective (a.) Used of a fortress, signifying that it has never been captured, or violated. | |
verb (v. t.) To act coyly like a maiden; -- with it as an indefinite object. |
maidenhair | noun (n.) A fern of the genus Adiantum (A. pedatum), having very slender graceful stalks. It is common in the United States, and is sometimes used in medicine. The name is also applied to other species of the same genus, as to the Venus-hair. |
maidenhead | noun (n.) The state of being a maiden; maidenhood; virginity. |
noun (n.) The state of being unused or uncontaminated; freshness; purity. | |
noun (n.) The hymen, or virginal membrane. |
maidenhood | noun (n.) The state of being a maid or a virgin; virginity. |
noun (n.) Newness; freshness; uncontaminated state. |
maidenlike | adjective (a.) Like a maiden; modest; coy. |
maidenliness | noun (n.) The quality of being maidenly; the behavior that becomes a maid; modesty; gentleness. |
maidenly | adjective (a.) Like a maid; suiting a maid; maiden-like; gentle, modest, reserved. |
adverb (adv.) In a maidenlike manner. |
maidenship | noun (n.) Maidenhood. |
maidhood | noun (n.) Maidenhood. |
maidmarian | noun (n.) The lady of the May games; one of the characters in a morris dance; a May queen. Afterward, a grotesque character personated in sports and buffoonery by a man in woman's clothes. |
noun (n.) A kind of dance. |
maidpale | adjective (a.) Pale, like a sick girl. |
maidservant | noun (n.) A female servant. |
maieutic | adjective (a.) Alt. of Maieutical |
maieutical | adjective (a.) Serving to assist childbirth. |
adjective (a.) Fig. : Aiding, or tending to, the definition and interpretation of thoughts or language. |
maieutics | noun (n.) The art of giving birth (i. e., clearness and conviction) to ideas, which are conceived as struggling for birth. |
maiger | noun (n.) The meagre. |
maigre | adjective (a.) Belonging to a fast day or fast; as, a maigre day. |
maihem | noun (n.) See Maim, and Mayhem. |
maikel | noun (n.) A South American carnivore of the genus Conepatus, allied to the skunk, but larger, and having a longer snout. The tail is not bushy. |
maikong | noun (n.) A South American wild dog (Canis cancrivorus); the crab-eating dog. |
noun (n.) A spot. | |
noun (n.) A small piece of money; especially, an English silver half-penny of the time of Henry V. | |
noun (n.) Rent; tribute. | |
noun (n.) A flexible fabric made of metal rings interlinked. It was used especially for defensive armor. | |
noun (n.) Hence generally, armor, or any defensive covering. | |
noun (n.) A contrivance of interlinked rings, for rubbing off the loose hemp on lines and white cordage. | |
noun (n.) Any hard protective covering of an animal, as the scales and plates of reptiles, shell of a lobster, etc. | |
noun (n.) A bag; a wallet. | |
noun (n.) The bag or bags with the letters, papers, papers, or other matter contained therein, conveyed under public authority from one post office to another; the whole system of appliances used by government in the conveyance and delivery of mail matter. | |
noun (n.) That which comes in the mail; letters, etc., received through the post office. | |
noun (n.) A trunk, box, or bag, in which clothing, etc., may be carried. | |
verb (v. t.) To arm with mail. | |
verb (v. t.) To pinion. | |
verb (v. t.) To deliver into the custody of the postoffice officials, or place in a government letter box, for transmission by mail; to post; as, to mail a letter. |
mailing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mail |
noun (n.) A farm. |
mailable | adjective (a.) Admissible lawfully into the mail. |
mailclad | adjective (a.) Protected by a coat of mail; clad in armor. |
mailed | adjective (a.) Protected by an external coat, or covering, of scales or plates. |
adjective (a.) Spotted; speckled. | |
(imp. & p. p.) of Mail |
maiming | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Maim |
maimedness | noun (n.) State of being maimed. |
main | noun (n.) A hand or match at dice. |
noun (n.) A stake played for at dice. | |
noun (n.) The largest throw in a match at dice; a throw at dice within given limits, as in the game of hazard. | |
noun (n.) A match at cockfighting. | |
noun (n.) A main-hamper. | |
noun (v.) principal duct or pipe, as distinguished from lesser ones; esp. (Engin.), a principal pipe leading to or from a reservoir; as, a fire main. | |
adjective (a.) Very or extremely strong. | |
adjective (a.) Vast; huge. | |
adjective (a.) Unqualified; absolute; entire; sheer. | |
adjective (a.) Principal; chief; first in size, rank, importance, etc. | |
adjective (a.) Important; necessary. | |
adjective (a.) Very; extremely; as, main heavy. | |
verb (v.) Strength; force; might; violent effort. | |
verb (v.) The chief or principal part; the main or most important thing. | |
verb (v.) The great sea, as distinguished from an arm, bay, etc. ; the high sea; the ocean. | |
verb (v.) The continent, as distinguished from an island; the mainland. |
maine | noun (n.) One of the New England States. |
mainland | noun (n.) The continent; the principal land; -- opposed to island, or peninsula. |
mainmast | noun (n.) The principal mast in a ship or other vessel. |
mainor | noun (n.) A thing stolen found on the person of the thief. |
mainpernable | adjective (a.) Capable of being admitted to give surety by mainpernors; able to be mainprised. |
mainpernor | noun (n.) A surety, under the old writ of mainprise, for a prisoner's appearance in court at a day. |
mainpin | noun (n.) A kingbolt. |
mainprise | noun (n.) A writ directed to the sheriff, commanding him to take sureties, called mainpernors, for the prisoner's appearance, and to let him go at large. This writ is now obsolete. |
noun (n.) Deliverance of a prisoner on security for his appearance at a day. | |
verb (v. t.) To suffer to go at large, on his finding sureties, or mainpernors, for his appearance at a day; -- said of a prisoner. |
mainprising | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Mainprise |
mains | noun (n.) The farm attached to a mansion house. |
mainsail | noun (n.) The principal sail in a ship or other vessel. |
mainsheet | noun (n.) One of the ropes by which the mainsail is hauled aft and trimmed. |
mainspring | noun (n.) The principal or most important spring in a piece of mechanism, especially the moving spring of a watch or clock or the spring in a gunlock which impels the hammer. Hence: The chief or most powerful motive; the efficient cause of action. |
mainstay | noun (n.) The stay extending from the foot of the foremast to the maintop. |
noun (n.) Main support; principal dependence. |
maintaining | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Maintain |
maintainable | adjective (a.) That maybe maintained. |
maintainer | noun (n.) One who maintains. |
maintainor | noun (n.) One who, not being interested, maintains a cause depending between others, by furnishing money, etc., to either party. |
maintenance | noun (n.) The act of maintaining; sustenance; support; defense; vindication. |
noun (n.) That which maintains or supports; means of sustenance; supply of necessaries and conveniences. | |
noun (n.) An officious or unlawful intermeddling in a cause depending between others, by assisting either party with money or means to carry it on. See Champerty. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH MAİTE:
English Words which starts with 'ma' and ends with 'te':
machete | noun (n.) A large heavy knife resembling a broadsword, often two or three feet in length, -- used by the inhabitants of Spanish America as a hatchet to cut their way through thickets, and for various other purposes. |
maculate | adjective (a.) Marked with spots or maculae; blotched; hence, defiled; impure; as, most maculate thoughts. |
verb (v.) To spot; to stain; to blur. |
madreporite | noun (n.) A fossil coral. |
noun (n.) The madreporic plate of echinoderms. |
maegbote | noun (n.) Alt. of Magbote |
magbote | noun (n.) Compensation for the injury done by slaying a kinsman. |
noun (n.) See Maegbote. |
magistrate | noun (n.) A person clothed with power as a public civil officer; a public civil officer invested with the executive government, or some branch of it. |
magnesite | noun (n.) Native magnesium carbonate occurring in white compact or granular masses, and also in rhombohedral crystals. |
magnetite | noun (n.) An oxide of iron (Fe3O4) occurring in isometric crystals, also massive, of a black color and metallic luster. It is readily attracted by a magnet and sometimes possesses polarity, being then called loadstone. It is an important iron ore. Called also magnetic iron. |
majorate | noun (n.) The office or rank of a major. |
adjective (a.) To augment; to increase. |
makebate | noun (n.) One who excites contentions and quarrels. |
malachite | noun (n.) Native hydrous carbonate of copper, usually occurring in green mammillary masses with concentric fibrous structure. |
malacolite | noun (n.) A variety of pyroxene. |
malamate | noun (n.) A salt of malamic acid. |
malate | noun (n.) A salt of malic acid. |
maleate | noun (n.) A salt of maleic acid. |
malonate | adjective (a.) At salt of malonic acid. |
mammillate | adjective (a.) Alt. of Mammillated |
mammonite | noun (n.) One devoted to the acquisition of wealth or the service of Mammon. |
manbote | noun (n.) A sum paid to a lord as a pecuniary compensation for killing his man (that is, his vassal, servant, or tenant). |
mandarinate | noun (n.) The collective body of officials or persons of rank in China. |
mandate | noun (n.) An official or authoritative command; an order or injunction; a commission; a judicial precept. |
noun (n.) A rescript of the pope, commanding an ordinary collator to put the person therein named in possession of the first vacant benefice in his collation. | |
noun (n.) A contract by which one employs another to manage any business for him. By the Roman law, it must have been gratuitous. |
mandelate | noun (n.) A salt of mandelic acid. |
mandibulate | noun (n.) An insect having mandibles. |
adjective (a.) Alt. of Mandibulated |
mandragorite | noun (n.) One who habitually intoxicates himself with a narcotic obtained from mandrake. |
manganate | noun (n.) A salt of manganic acid. |
manganesate | noun (n.) A manganate. |
manganite | noun (n.) One of the oxides of manganese; -- called also gray manganese ore. It occurs in brilliant steel-gray or iron-black crystals, also massive. |
noun (n.) A compound of manganese dioxide with a metallic oxide; so called as though derived from the hypothetical manganous acid. |
manicate | adjective (a.) Covered with hairs or pubescence so platted together and interwoven as to form a mass easily removed. |
mannitate | noun (n.) A salt of mannitic acid. |
mannite | noun (n.) A white crystalline substance of a sweet taste obtained from a so-called manna, the dried sap of the flowering ash (Fraxinus ornus); -- called also mannitol, and hydroxy hexane. Cf. Dulcite. |
noun (n.) A sweet white efflorescence from dried fronds of kelp, especially from those of the Laminaria saccharina, or devil's apron. |
mansuete | adjective (a.) Tame; gentle; kind. |
marcasite | noun (n.) A sulphide of iron resembling pyrite or common iron pyrites in composition, but differing in form; white iron pyrites. |
marcionite | noun (n.) A follower of Marcion, a Gnostic of the second century, who adopted the Oriental notion of the two conflicting principles, and imagined that between them there existed a third power, neither wholly good nor evil, the Creator of the world and of man, and the God of the Jewish dispensation. |
margarate | noun (n.) A compound of the so-called margaric acid with a base. |
margarite | noun (n.) A pearl. |
noun (n.) A mineral related to the micas, but low in silica and yielding brittle folia with pearly luster. |
margarodite | noun (n.) A hidrous potash mica related to muscovite. |
marginate | noun (n.) Having a margin distinct in appearance or structure. |
verb (v. t.) To furnish with a distinct margin; to margin. |
margravate | noun (n.) Alt. of Margraviate |
margraviate | noun (n.) The territory or jurisdiction of a margrave. |
marguerite | noun (n.) The daisy (Bellis perennis). The name is often applied also to the ox-eye daisy and to the China aster. |
marionette | noun (n.) A puppet moved by strings, as in a puppet show. |
noun (n.) The buffel duck. |
marlite | noun (n.) A variety of marl. |
marmatite | noun (n.) A ferruginous variety of shalerite or zinc blende, nearly black in color. |
marmolite | noun (n.) A thin, laminated variety of serpentine, usually of a pale green color. |
marmorate | adjective (a.) Alt. of Marmorated |
maronite | noun (n.) One of a body of nominal Christians, who speak the Arabic language, and reside on Mount Lebanon and in different parts of Syria. They take their name from one Maron of the 6th century. |
marquisate | noun (n.) The seigniory, dignity, or lordship of a marquis; the territory governed by a marquis. |
marsupiate | adjective (a.) Related to or resembling the marsupials; furnished with a pouch for the young, as the marsupials, and also some fishes and Crustacea. |
marsupite | noun (n.) A fossil crinoid of the genus Marsupites, resembling a purse in form. |
martite | noun (n.) Iron sesquioxide in isometric form, probably a pseudomorph after magnetite. |
mascagnite | noun (n.) Native sulphate of ammonia, found in volcanic districts; -- so named from Mascagni, who discovered it. |
mascotte | noun (n.) A person who is supposed to bring good luck to the household to which he or she belongs; anything that brings good luck. |
masorite | noun (n.) One of the writers of the Masora. |
mate | noun (n.) The Paraguay tea, being the dried leaf of the Brazilian holly (Ilex Paraguensis). The infusion has a pleasant odor, with an agreeable bitter taste, and is much used for tea in South America. |
noun (n.) Same as Checkmate. | |
noun (n.) One who customarily associates with another; a companion; an associate; any object which is associated or combined with a similar object. | |
noun (n.) Hence, specifically, a husband or wife; and among the lower animals, one of a pair associated for propagation and the care of their young. | |
noun (n.) A suitable companion; a match; an equal. | |
noun (n.) An officer in a merchant vessel ranking next below the captain. If there are more than one bearing the title, they are called, respectively, first mate, second mate, third mate, etc. In the navy, a subordinate officer or assistant; as, master's mate; surgeon's mate. | |
adjective (a.) See 2d Mat. | |
verb (v. t.) To confuse; to confound. | |
verb (v. t.) To checkmate. | |
verb (v. t.) To match; to marry. | |
verb (v. t.) To match one's self against; to oppose as equal; to compete with. | |
verb (v. i.) To be or become a mate or mates, especially in sexual companionship; as, some birds mate for life; this bird will not mate with that one. |
matelote | noun (n.) A dish of food composed of many kinds of fish. |
noun (n.) Alt. of Matelotte |
materiate | adjective (a.) Alt. of Materiated |
matriarchate | noun (n.) The office or jurisdiction of a matriarch; a matriarchal form of government. |
matriculate | noun (n.) One who is matriculated. |
adjective (a.) Matriculated. | |
verb (v. t.) To enroll; to enter in a register; specifically, to enter or admit to membership in a body or society, particularly in a college or university, by enrolling the name in a register. | |
verb (v. i.) To go though the process of admission to membership, as by examination and enrollment, in a society or college. |
matte | noun (n.) A partly reduced copper sulphide, obtained by alternately roasting and melting copper ore in separating the metal from associated iron ores, and called coarse metal, fine metal, etc., according to the grade of fineness. On the exterior it is dark brown or black, but on a fresh surface is yellow or bronzy in color. |
noun (n.) A dead or dull finish, as in gilding where the gold leaf is not burnished, or in painting where the surface is purposely deprived of gloss. |
maturate | adjective (a.) To bring to ripeness or maturity; to ripen. |
adjective (a.) To promote the perfect suppuration of (an abscess). | |
verb (v. i.) To ripen; to become mature; specif/cally, to suppurate. |
matelotte | noun (n.) A stew, commonly of fish, flavored with wine, and served with a wine sauce containing onions, mushrooms, etc. |
noun (n.) An old dance of sailors, in double time, and somewhat like a hornpipe. |