First Names Rhyming CICERON
English Words Rhyming CICERON
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES CİCERON AS A WHOLE:
cicerone | noun (n.) One who shows strangers the curiosities of a place; a guide. |
ciceronian | adjective (a.) Resembling Cicero in style or action; eloquent. |
ciceronianism | noun (n.) Imitation of, or resemblance to, the style or action Cicero; a Ciceronian phrase or expression. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH CİCERON (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 6 Letters (iceron) - English Words That Ends with iceron:
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (ceron) - English Words That Ends with ceron:
puceron | noun (n.) Any plant louse, or aphis. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (eron) - English Words That Ends with eron:
acheron | noun (n.) A river in the Nether World or infernal regions; also, the infernal regions themselves. By some of the English poets it was supposed to be a flaming lake or gulf. |
archenteron | noun (n.) The primitive enteron or undifferentiated digestive sac of a gastrula or other embryo. See Illust. under Invagination. |
aileron | noun (n.) A half gable, as at the end of a penthouse or of the aisle of a church. |
| noun (n.) A small plane or surface capable of being manipulated by the pilot of a flying machine to preserve or destroy lateral balance; a hinged wing tip; a lateral stabilizing or balancing plane. |
chaperon | noun (n.) A hood; especially, an ornamental or an official hood. |
| noun (n.) A device placed on the foreheads of horses which draw the hearse in pompous funerals. |
| noun (n.) A matron who accompanies a young lady in public, for propriety, or as a guide and protector. |
| verb (v. t.) To attend in public places as a guide and protector; to matronize. |
decameron | noun (n.) A celebrated collection of tales, supposed to be related in ten days; -- written in the 14th century, by Boccaccio, an Italian. |
dzeron | noun (n.) The Chinese yellow antelope (Procapra gutturosa), a remarkably swift-footed animal, inhabiting the deserts of Central Asia, Thibet, and China. |
ecderon | noun (n.) See Ecteron. |
ecteron | noun (n.) The external layer of the skin and mucous membranes; epithelium; ecderon. |
enderon | noun (n.) The deep sensitive and vascular layer of the skin and mucous membranes. |
enteron | noun (n.) The whole alimentary, or enteric, canal. |
ephemeron | noun (n.) One of the ephemeral flies. |
epimeron | noun (n.) In crustaceans: The part of the side of a somite external to the basal joint of each appendage. |
| noun (n.) In insects: The lateral piece behind the episternum. |
heron | noun (n.) Any wading bird of the genus Ardea and allied genera, of the family Ardeidae. The herons have a long, sharp bill, and long legs and toes, with the claw of the middle toe toothed. The common European heron (Ardea cinerea) is remarkable for its directly ascending flight, and was formerly hunted with the larger falcons. |
hexahemeron | noun (n.) A term of six days. |
| noun (n.) The history of the six day's work of creation, as contained in the first chapter of Genesis. |
hieron | noun (n.) A consecrated place; esp., a temple. |
mesenteron | noun (n.) All that part of the alimentary canal which is developed from the primitive enteron and is lined with hypoblast. It is distinguished from the stomod/um, a part at the anterior end of the canal, including the cavity of the mouth, and the proctod/um, a part at the posterior end, which are formed by invagination and are lined with epiblast. |
moneron | noun (n.) One of the Monera. |
monopteron | noun (n.) A circular temple consisting of a roof supported on columns, without a cella. |
nycthemeron | noun (n.) The natural day and night, or space of twenty-four hours. |
oberon | noun (n.) The king of the fairies, and husband of Titania or Queen Mab. |
octaemeron | noun (n.) A fast of eight days before a great festival. |
quarteron | noun (n.) A quarter; esp., a quarter of a pound, or a quarter of a hundred. |
| noun (n.) Alt. of Quarteroon |
| noun (n.) A quarter; esp., a quarter of a pound, or a quarter of a hundred. |
| noun (n.) Alt. of Quarteroon |
quateron | noun (n.) See 2d Quarteron. |
| noun (n.) See 2d Quarteron. |
percheron | noun (n.) One of a breed of draught horses originating in Perche, an old district of France; -- called also Percheron-Norman. |
perienteron | noun (n.) The primitive perivisceral cavity. |
phytomeron | noun (n.) An organic element of a flowering plant; a phyton. |
pteron | noun (n.) The region of the skull, in the temporal fossa back of the orbit, where the great wing of the sphenoid, the temporal, the parietal, and the frontal hones approach each other. |
seron | noun (n.) Alt. of Seroon |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (ron) - English Words That Ends with ron:
almendron | noun (n.) The lofty Brazil-nut tree. |
anatron | noun (n.) Native carbonate of soda; natron. |
| noun (n.) Glass gall or sandiver. |
| noun (n.) Saltpeter. |
andiron | noun (n.) A utensil for supporting wood when burning in a fireplace, one being placed on each side; a firedog; as, a pair of andirons. |
andron | noun (n.) The apartment appropriated for the males. This was in the lower part of the house. |
apastron | noun (n.) That point in the orbit of a double star where the smaller star is farthest from its primary. |
apron | noun (n.) An article of dress, of cloth, leather, or other stuff, worn on the fore part of the body, to keep the clothes clean, to defend them from injury, or as a covering. It is commonly tied at the waist by strings. |
| noun (n.) Something which by its shape or use suggests an apron; |
| noun (n.) The fat skin covering the belly of a goose or duck. |
| noun (n.) A piece of leather, or other material, to be spread before a person riding on an outside seat of a vehicle, to defend him from the rain, snow, or dust; a boot. |
| noun (n.) A leaden plate that covers the vent of a cannon. |
| noun (n.) A piece of carved timber, just above the foremost end of the keel. |
| noun (n.) A platform, or flooring of plank, at the entrance of a dock, against which the dock gates are shut. |
| noun (n.) A flooring of plank before a dam to cause the water to make a gradual descent. |
| noun (n.) The piece that holds the cutting tool of a planer. |
| noun (n.) A strip of lead which leads the drip of a wall into a gutter; a flashing. |
| noun (n.) The infolded abdomen of a crab. |
baron | noun (n.) A title or degree of nobility; originally, the possessor of a fief, who had feudal tenants under him; in modern times, in France and Germany, a nobleman next in rank below a count; in England, a nobleman of the lowest grade in the House of Lords, being next below a viscount. |
| noun (n.) A husband; as, baron and feme, husband and wife. |
beakiron | noun (n.) A bickern; a bench anvil with a long beak, adapted to reach the interior surface of sheet metal ware; the horn of an anvil. |
boron | noun (n.) A nonmetallic element occurring abundantly in borax. It is reduced with difficulty to the free state, when it can be obtained in several different forms; viz., as a substance of a deep olive color, in a semimetallic form, and in colorless quadratic crystals similar to the diamond in hardness and other properties. It occurs in nature also in boracite, datolite, tourmaline, and some other minerals. Atomic weight 10.9. Symbol B. |
caldron | noun (n.) A large kettle or boiler of copper, brass, or iron. [Written also cauldron.] |
catoptron | noun (n.) A reflecting optical glass or instrument; a mirror. |
catopron | noun (n.) See Catopter. |
chaldron | noun (n.) An English dry measure, being, at London, 36 bushels heaped up, or its equivalent weight, and more than twice as much at Newcastle. Now used exclusively for coal and coke. |
chamfron | noun (n.) The frontlet, or head armor, of a horse. |
charon | noun (n.) The son of Erebus and Nox, whose office it was to ferry the souls of the dead over the Styx, a river of the infernal regions. |
chaudron | noun (n.) See Chawdron. |
chauldron | noun (n.) See Chawdron. |
chawdron | noun (n.) Entrails. |
chevron | noun (n.) One of the nine honorable ordinaries, consisting of two broad bands of the width of the bar, issuing, respectively from the dexter and sinister bases of the field and conjoined at its center. |
| noun (n.) A distinguishing mark, above the elbow, on the sleeve of a non-commissioned officer's coat. |
| noun (n.) A zigzag molding, or group of moldings, common in Norman architecture. |
chiliahedron | noun (n.) A figure bounded by a thousand plane surfaces |
citron | noun (n.) A fruit resembling a lemon, but larger, and pleasantly aromatic. The thick rind, when candied, is the citron of commerce. |
| noun (n.) A citron tree. |
| noun (n.) A citron melon. |
cobiron | noun (n.) An andiron with a knob at the top. |
cascaron | noun (n.) Lit., an eggshell; hence, an eggshell filled with confetti to be thrown during balls, carnivals, etc. |
coelectron | noun (n.) See Electron. |
decahedron | noun (n.) A solid figure or body inclosed by ten plane surfaces. |
deltohedron | noun (n.) A solid bounded by twelve quadrilateral faces. It is a hemihedral form of the isometric system, allied to the tetrahedron. |
diatessaron | noun (n.) The interval of a fourth. |
| noun (n.) A continuous narrative arranged from the first four books of the New Testament. |
| noun (n.) An electuary compounded of four medicines. |
dihedron | noun (n.) A figure with two sides or surfaces. |
dodecahedron | noun (n.) A solid having twelve faces. |
duodecahedron | noun (n.) See Dodecahedral, and Dodecahedron. |
ekaboron | noun (n.) The name given by Mendelejeff in accordance with the periodic law, and by prediction, to a hypothetical element then unknown, but since discovered and named scandium; -- so called because it was a missing analogue of the boron group. See Scandium. |
electron | noun (n.) Amber; also, the alloy of gold and silver, called electrum. |
| () One of those particles, having about one thousandth the mass of a hydrogen atom, which are projected from the cathode of a vacuum tube as the cathode rays and from radioactive substances as the beta rays; -- called also corpuscle. The electron carries (or is) a natural unit of negative electricity, equal to 3.4 x 10-10 electrostatic units. It has been detected only when in rapid motion; its mass, which is electromagnetic, is practically constant at the lesser speeds, but increases as the velocity approaches that of light. Electrons are all of one kind, so far as known, and probably are the ultimate constituents of all atoms. An atom from which an electron has been detached has a positive charge and is called a coelectron. |
elytron | noun (n.) Alt. of Elytrum |
enheahedron | noun (n.) A figure having nine sides; a nonagon. |
entoplastron | noun (n.) The median plate of the plastron of turtles; -- called also entosternum. |
epiplastron | noun (n.) One of the first pair of lateral plates in the plastron of turtles. |
epoophoron | noun (n.) See Parovarium. |
exametron | noun (n.) An hexameter. |
fanfaron | noun (n.) A bully; a hector; a swaggerer; an empty boaster. |
flatiron | noun (n.) An iron with a flat, smooth surface for ironing clothes. |
fleuron | noun (n.) A flower-shaped ornament, esp. one terminating an object or forming one of a series, as a knob of a cover to a dish, or a flower-shaped part in a necklace. |
garron | noun (n.) Same as Garran. |
goudron | noun (n.) a small fascine or fagot, steeped in wax, pitch, and glue, used in various ways, as for igniting buildings or works, or to light ditches and ramparts. |
gridiron | noun (n.) A grated iron utensil for broiling flesh and fish over coals. |
| noun (n.) An openwork frame on which vessels are placed for examination, cleaning, and repairs. |
| noun (n.) A football field. |
gyron | noun (n.) A subordinary of triangular form having one of its angles at the fess point and the opposite aide at the edge of the escutcheon. When there is only one gyron on the shield it is bounded by two lines drawn from the fess point, one horizontally to the dexter side, and one to the dexter chief corner. |
handiron | noun (n.) See Andrion. |
hemelytron | noun (n.) Alt. of Hemelytrum |
hemihedron | noun (n.) A solid hemihedrally derived. The tetrahedron is a hemihedron. |
heptahedron | noun (n.) A solid figure with seven sides. |
hexahedron | noun (n.) A solid body of six sides or faces. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH CİCERON (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 6 Letters (cicero) - Words That Begins with cicero:
cicero | noun (n.) Pica type; -- so called by French printers. |
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (cicer) - Words That Begins with cicer:
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (cice) - Words That Begins with cice:
cicely | noun (n.) Any one of several umbelliferous plants, of the genera Myrrhis, Osmorrhiza, etc. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (cic) - Words That Begins with cic:
cicada | noun (n.) Any species of the genus Cicada. They are large hemipterous insects, with nearly transparent wings. The male makes a shrill sound by peculiar organs in the under side of the abdomen, consisting of a pair of stretched membranes, acted upon by powerful muscles. A noted American species (C. septendecim) is called the seventeen year locust. Another common species is the dogday cicada. |
cicala | noun (n.) A cicada. See Cicada. |
cicatrice | noun (n.) A cicatrix. |
cicatricial | adjective (a.) Relating to, or having the character of, a cicatrix. |
cicatricle | noun (n.) The germinating point in the embryo of a seed; the point in the yolk of an egg at which development begins. |
cicatrisive | adjective (a.) Tending to promote the formation of a cicatrix; good for healing of a wound. |
cicatrix | noun (n.) The pellicle which forms over a wound or breach of continuity and completes the process of healing in the latter, and which subsequently contracts and becomes white, forming the scar. |
cicatrizant | noun (n.) A medicine or application that promotes the healing of a sore or wound, or the formation of a cicatrix. |
cicatrization | noun (n.) The process of forming a cicatrix, or the state of being cicatrized. |
cicatrizing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Cicatrize |
cicatrose | adjective (a.) Full of scars. |
cichoraceous | adjective (a.) Belonging to, or resembling, a suborder of composite plants of which the chicory (Cichorium) is the type. |
cicisbeism | noun (n.) The state or conduct of a cicisbeo. |
cicisbeo | noun (n.) A professed admirer of a married woman; a dangler about women. |
| noun (n.) A knot of silk or ribbon attached to a fan, walking stick, etc. |
ciclatoun | noun (n.) A costly cloth, of uncertain material, used in the Middle Ages. |
cicuration | noun (n.) The act of taming. |
cicuta | noun (n.) a genus of poisonous umbelliferous plants, of which the water hemlock or cowbane is best known. |
cicutoxin | noun (n.) The active principle of the water hemlock (Cicuta) extracted as a poisonous gummy substance. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH CİCERON:
English Words which starts with 'cic' and ends with 'ron':
English Words which starts with 'ci' and ends with 'on':
cibation | noun (n.) The act of taking food. |
| noun (n.) The process or operation of feeding the contents of the crucible with fresh material. |
cinefaction | noun (n.) Cineration; reduction to ashes. |
cineration | noun (n.) The reducing of anything to ashes by combustion; cinefaction. |
cinnamon | noun (n.) The inner bark of the shoots of Cinnamomum Zeylanicum, a tree growing in Ceylon. It is aromatic, of a moderately pungent taste, and is one of the best cordial, carminative, and restorative spices. |
| noun (n.) Cassia. |
circination | noun (n.) An orbicular motion. |
| noun (n.) A circle; a concentric layer. |
circuition | noun (n.) The act of going round; circumlocution. |
circulation | noun (n.) The act of moving in a circle, or in a course which brings the moving body to the place where its motion began. |
| noun (n.) The act of passing from place to place or person to person; free diffusion; transmission. |
| noun (n.) Currency; circulating coin; notes, bills, etc., current for coin. |
| noun (n.) The extent to which anything circulates or is circulated; the measure of diffusion; as, the circulation of a newspaper. |
| noun (n.) The movement of the blood in the blood-vascular system, by which it is brought into close relations with almost every living elementary constituent. Also, the movement of the sap in the vessels and tissues of plants. |
circumcision | noun (n.) The act of cutting off the prepuce or foreskin of males, or the internal labia of females. |
| noun (n.) The Jews, as a circumcised people. |
| noun (n.) Rejection of the sins of the flesh; spiritual purification, and acceptance of the Christian faith. |
circumclusion | noun (n.) Act of inclosing on all sides. |
circumcursation | noun (n.) The act of running about; also, rambling language. |
circumdenudation | noun (n.) Denudation around or in the neighborhood of an object. |
circumduction | noun (n.) A leading about; circumlocution. |
| noun (n.) An annulling; cancellation. |
| noun (n.) The rotation of a limb round an imaginary axis, so as to describe a concial surface. |
circumflection | noun (n.) See Circumflexion. |
circumflexion | noun (n.) The act of bending, or causing to assume a curved form. |
| noun (n.) A winding about; a turning; a circuity; a fold. |
circumfusion | noun (n.) The act of pouring or spreading round; the state of being spread round. |
circumgestation | noun (n.) The act or process of carrying about. |
circumgyration | noun (n.) The act of turning, rolling, or whirling round. |
circumincession | noun (n.) The reciprocal existence in each other of the three persons of the Trinity. |
circumlocution | noun (n.) The use of many words to express an idea that might be expressed by few; indirect or roundabout language; a periphrase. |
circumnavigation | noun (n.) The act of circumnavigating, or sailing round. |
circumnutation | noun (n.) The successive bowing or bending in different directions of the growing tip of the stems of many plants, especially seen in climbing plants. |
circumposition | noun (n.) The act of placing in a circle, or round about, or the state of being so placed. |
circumrotation | noun (n.) The act of rolling or revolving round, as a wheel; circumvolution; the state of being whirled round. |
circumscription | noun (n.) An inscription written around anything. |
| noun (n.) The exterior line which determines the form or magnitude of a body; outline; periphery. |
| noun (n.) The act of limiting, or the state of being limited, by conditions or restraints; bound; confinement; limit. |
circumspection | noun (n.) Attention to all the facts and circumstances of a case; caution; watchfulness. |
circumvallation | noun (n.) The act of surrounding with a wall or rampart. |
| noun (n.) A line of field works made around a besieged place and the besieging army, to protect the camp of the besiegers against the attack of an enemy from without. |
circumvection | noun (n.) The act of carrying anything around, or the state of being so carried. |
circumvention | noun (n.) The act of prevailing over another by arts, address, or fraud; deception; fraud; imposture; delusion. |
circumvolation | noun (n.) The act of flying round. |
circumvolution | noun (n.) The act of rolling round; the state of being rolled. |
| noun (n.) A thing rolled round another. |
| noun (n.) A roundabout procedure; a circumlocution. |
citation | noun (n.) An official summons or notice given to a person to appear; the paper containing such summons or notice. |
| noun (n.) The act of citing a passage from a book, or from another person, in his own words; also, the passage or words quoted; quotation. |
| noun (n.) Enumeration; mention; as, a citation of facts. |
| noun (n.) A reference to decided cases, or books of authority, to prove a point in law. |
citrination | noun (n.) The process by which anything becomes of the color of a lemon; esp., in alchemy, the state of perfection in the philosopher's stone indicated by its assuming a deep yellow color. |
civilization | noun (n.) The act of civilizing, or the state of being civilized; national culture; refinement. |
| noun (n.) Rendering a criminal process civil. |