First Names Rhyming NITUNA
English Words Rhyming NITUNA
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES NÝTUNA AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH NÝTUNA (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (ituna) - English Words That Ends with ituna:
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (tuna) - English Words That Ends with tuna:
tuna | noun (n.) The Opuntia Tuna. See Prickly pear, under Prickly. |
| noun (n.) The tunny. |
| noun (n.) The bonito, 2. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (una) - English Words That Ends with una:
abuna | noun (n.) The Patriarch, or head of the Abyssinian Church. |
avifauna | noun (n.) The birds, or all the kinds of birds, inhabiting a region. |
becuna | noun (n.) A fish of the Mediterranean (Sphyraena spet). See Barracuda. |
fauna | noun (n.) The animals of any given area or epoch; as, the fauna of America; fossil fauna; recent fauna. |
guna | noun (n.) In Sanskrit grammar, a lengthening of the simple vowels a, i, e, by prefixing an a element. The term is sometimes used to denote the same vowel change in other languages. |
lacuna | noun (n.) A small opening; a small pit or depression; a small blank space; a gap or vacancy; a hiatus. |
| noun (n.) A small opening; a small depression or cavity; a space, as a vacant space between the cells of plants, or one of the spaces left among the tissues of the lower animals, which serve in place of vessels for the circulation of the body fluids, or the cavity or sac, usually of very small size, in a mucous membrane. |
luna | noun (n.) The moon. |
| noun (n.) Silver. |
medialuna | noun (n.) See Half-moon. |
puna | noun (n.) A cold arid table-land, as in the Andes of Peru. |
vacuna | noun (n.) The goddess of rural leisure, to whom the husbandmen sacrificed at the close of the harvest. She was especially honored by the Sabines. |
varuna | noun (n.) The god of the waters; the Indian Neptune. He is regarded as regent of the west, and lord of punishment, and is represented as riding on a sea monster, holding in his hand a snaky cord or noose with which to bind offenders, under water. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH NÝTUNA (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (nitun) - Words That Begins with nitun:
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (nitu) - Words That Begins with nitu:
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (nit) - Words That Begins with nit:
nit | noun (n.) The egg of a louse or other small insect. |
nitency | noun (n.) Brightness; luster. |
| noun (n.) Endeavor; rffort; tendency. |
niter | noun (n.) Alt. of Nitre |
nitre | noun (n.) A white crystalline semitransparent salt; potassium nitrate; saltpeter. See Saltpeter. |
| noun (n.) Native sodium carbonate; natron. |
| noun (n.) See Niter. |
nithing | noun (n.) See Niding. |
nitid | adjective (a.) Bright; lustrous; shining. |
| adjective (a.) Gay; spruce; fine; -- said of persons. |
nitranilic | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or designating, a complex organic acid produced as a white crystalline substance by the action of nitrous acid on hydroquinone. |
nitraniline | noun (n.) Any one of a series of nitro derivatives of aniline. In general they are yellow crystalline substances. |
nitrate | noun (n.) A salt of nitric acid. |
nitrated | adjective (a.) Combined, or impregnated, with nitric acid, or some of its compounds. |
| adjective (a.) Prepared with nitrate of silver. |
nitratine | noun (n.) A mineral occurring in transparent crystals, usually of a white, sometimes of a reddish gray, or lemon-yellow, color; native sodium nitrate. It is used in making nitric acid and for manure. Called also soda niter. |
nitriary | noun (n.) An artificial bed of animal matter for the manufacture of niter by nitrification. See Nitrification, 2. |
nitric | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or containing, nitrogen; specifically, designating any one of those compounds in which, as contrasted with nitrous compounds, the element has a higher valence; as, nitric oxide; nitric acid. |
nitride | noun (n.) A binary compound of nitrogen with a more metallic element or radical; as, boric nitride. |
nitriferous | adjective (a.) Bearing niter; yielding, or containing, niter. |
nitrification | noun (n.) The act, process, or result of combining with nitrogen or some of its compounds. |
| noun (n.) The act or process of oxidizing nitrogen or its compounds so as to form nitrous or nitric acid. |
| noun (n.) A process of oxidation, in which nitrogenous vegetable and animal matter in the presence of air, moisture, and some basic substances, as lime or alkali carbonate, is converted into nitrates. |
nitrifier | noun (n.) An agent employed in nitrification. |
nitrifying | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Nitrify |
nitrile | noun (n.) Any one of a series of cyanogen compounds; particularly, one of those cyanides of alcohol radicals which, by boiling with acids or alkalies, produce a carboxyl acid, with the elimination of the nitrogen as ammonia. |
nitrite | noun (n.) A salt of nitrous acid. |
nitrobenzene | noun (n.) A yellow aromatic liquid (C6H5.NO2), produced by the action of nitric acid on benzene, and called from its odor imitation oil of bitter almonds, or essence of mirbane. It is used in perfumery, and is manufactured in large quantities in the preparation of aniline. Fornerly called also nitrobenzol. |
nitrobenzol | noun (n.) Alt. of Nitrobenzole |
nitrobenzole | noun (n.) See Nitrobenzene. |
nitrocalcite | noun (n.) Nitrate of calcium, a substance having a grayish white color, occuring in efforescences on old walls, and in limestone caves, especially where there exists decaying animal matter. |
nitrocarbol | noun (n.) See Nitromethane. |
nitrocellulose | noun (n.) See Gun cotton, under Gun. |
nitroform | noun (n.) A nitro derivative of methane, analogous to chloroform, obtained as a colorless oily or crystalline substance, CH.(NO2)3, quite explosive, and having well-defined acid properties. |
nitrogelatin | noun (n.) An explosive consisting of gun cotton and camphor dissolved in nitroglycerin. |
nitrogen | noun (n.) A colorless nonmetallic element, tasteless and odorless, comprising four fifths of the atmosphere by volume. It is chemically very inert in the free state, and as such is incapable of supporting life (hence the name azote still used by French chemists); but it forms many important compounds, as ammonia, nitric acid, the cyanides, etc, and is a constituent of all organized living tissues, animal or vegetable. Symbol N. Atomic weight 14. It was formerly regarded as a permanent noncondensible gas, but was liquefied in 1877 by Cailletet of Paris, and Pictet of Geneva. |
nitrogenizing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Nitrogenize |
nitrogenous | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or resembling, nitrogen; as, a nitrogenous principle; nitrogenous compounds. |
nitroglycerin | noun (n.) A liquid appearing like a heavy oil, colorless or yellowish, and consisting of a mixture of several glycerin salts of nitric acid, and hence more properly called glycerin nitrate. It is made by the action of nitric acid on glycerin in the presence of sulphuric acid. It is extremely unstable and terribly explosive. A very dilute solution is used in medicine as a neurotic under the name of glonion. |
nitrohydrochloric | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or containing, nitric and hydrochloric acids. |
nitrol | noun (n.) Any one of a series of hydrocarbons containing the nitro and the nitroso or isonitroso group united to the same carbon atom. |
nitroleum | noun (n.) Nitroglycerin. |
nitrolic | adjective (a.) Of, derived from, or designating, a nitrol; as, a nitrolic acid. |
nitromagnesite | noun (n.) Nitrate of magnesium, a saline efflorescence closely resembling nitrate of calcium. |
nitrometer | noun (n.) An apparatus for determining the amount of nitrogen or some of its compounds in any substance subjected to analysis; an azotometer. |
nitromethane | noun (n.) A nitro derivative of methane obtained as a mobile liquid; -- called also nitrocarbol. |
nitromuriatic | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or composed of, nitric acid and muriatic acid; nitrohydrochloric. See Nitrohydrochloric. |
nitrophnol | noun (n.) Any one of a series of nitro derivatives of phenol. They are yellow oily or crystalline substances and have well-defined acid properties, as picric acid. |
nitroprussic | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, derived from, or designating, a complex acid called nitroprussic acid, obtained indirectly by the action of nitric acid on potassium ferrocyanide (yellow prussiate), as a red crystalline unstable substance. It forms salts called nitroprussides, which give a rich purple color with alkaline subphides. |
nitroprusside | noun (n.) See Nitroprussic. |
nitroquinol | noun (n.) A hypothetical nitro derivative of quinol or hydroquinone, not known in the free state, but forming a well defined series of derivatives. |
niteosaccharin | noun (n.) An explosive nitro derivative of certain sugars, analogous to nitroglycerin, gun cotton, etc. |
nitrosalicylic | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or designating, a nitro derivative of salicylic acid, called also anilic acid. |
nitrose | adjective (a.) See Nitrous. |
nitrosyl | noun (n.) the radical NO, called also the nitroso group. The term is sometimes loosely used to designate certain nitro compounds; as, nitrosyl sulphuric acid. Used also adjectively. |
nitrosylic | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or containing, nitrosyl; as, nitrosylic acid. |
nitrous | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or containing, niter; of the quality of niter, or resembling it. |
| adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or designating, any one of those compounds in which nitrogen has a relatively lower valence as contrasted with nitric compounds. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH NÝTUNA:
English Words which starts with 'ni' and ends with 'na':
nicotiana | noun (n.) A genus of American and Asiatic solanaceous herbs, with viscid foliage and funnel-shaped blossoms. Several species yield tobacco. See Tobacco. |
nirvana | noun (n.) In the Buddhist system of religion, the final emancipation of the soul from transmigration, and consequently a beatific enfrachisement from the evils of wordly existence, as by annihilation or absorption into the divine. See Buddhism. |