First Names Rhyming CELOSIA
English Words Rhyming CELOSIA
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES CELOSİA AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH CELOSİA (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 6 Letters (elosia) - English Words That Ends with elosia:
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (losia) - English Words That Ends with losia:
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (osia) - English Words That Ends with osia:
ambrosia | noun (n.) The fabled food of the gods (as nectar was their drink), which conferred immortality upon those who partook of it. |
| noun (n.) An unguent of the gods. |
| noun (n.) A perfumed unguent, salve, or draught; something very pleasing to the taste or smell. |
| noun (n.) Formerly, a kind of fragrant plant; now (Bot.), a genus of plants, including some coarse and worthless weeds, called ragweed, hogweed, etc. |
| noun (n.) The food of certain small bark beetles, family Scolytidae believed to be fungi cultivated by the beetles in their burrows. |
tephrosia | noun (n.) A genus of leguminous shrubby plants and herbs, mostly found in tropical countries, a few herbaceous species being North American. The foliage is often ashy-pubescent, whence the name. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (sia) - English Words That Ends with sia:
acinesia | noun (n.) Same as Akinesia. |
acrasia | noun (n.) Alt. of Acrasy |
acrisia | noun (n.) Alt. of Acrisy |
aesthesia | noun (n.) Perception by the senses; feeling; -- the opposite of anaesthesia. |
akinesia | noun (n.) Paralysis of the motor nerves; loss of movement. |
amnesia | noun (n.) Forgetfulness; also, a defect of speech, from cerebral disease, in which the patient substitutes wrong words or names in the place of those he wishes to employ. |
anaesthesia | noun (n.) Entire or partial loss or absence of feeling or sensation; a state of general or local insensibility produced by disease or by the inhalation or application of an anaesthetic. |
analgesia | noun (n.) Absence of sensibility to pain. |
anaphrodisia | noun (n.) Absence of sexual appetite. |
anesthesia | adjective (a.) Alt. of Anesthetic |
anopsia | adjective (a.) Alt. of Anopsy |
antonomasia | noun (n.) The use of some epithet or the name of some office, dignity, or the like, instead of the proper name of the person; as when his majesty is used for a king, or when, instead of Aristotle, we say, the philosopher; or, conversely, the use of a proper name instead of an appellative, as when a wise man is called a Solomon, or an eminent orator a Cicero. |
aphasia | noun (n.) Alt. of Aphasy |
aplysia | noun (n.) A genus of marine mollusks of the order Tectibranchiata; the sea hare. Some of the species when disturbed throw out a deep purple liquor, which colors the water to some distance. See Illust. in Appendix. |
artemisia | noun (n.) A genus of plants including the plants called mugwort, southernwood, and wormwood. Of these A. absinthium, or common wormwood, is well known, and A. tridentata is the sage brush of the Rocky Mountain region. |
atresia | noun (n.) Absence or closure of a natural passage or channel of the body; imperforation. |
abasia | noun (n.) Inability to coordinate muscular actions properly in walking. |
aphrasia | noun (n.) = Dumbness. |
| noun (n.) A disorder of speech in which words can be uttered but not intelligibly joined together. |
aplasia | noun (n.) Incomplete or faulty development. |
athanasia | noun (n.) Alt. of Athanasy |
athrepsia | noun (n.) Profound debility of children due to lack of food and to unhygienic surroundings. |
cassia | noun (n.) A genus of leguminous plants (herbs, shrubs, or trees) of many species, most of which have purgative qualities. The leaves of several species furnish the senna used in medicine. |
| noun (n.) The bark of several species of Cinnamomum grown in China, etc.; Chinese cinnamon. It is imported as cassia, but commonly sold as cinnamon, from which it differs more or less in strength and flavor, and the amount of outer bark attached. |
duboisia | noun (n.) Same as Duboisine. |
dysaesthesia | noun (n.) Impairment of any of the senses, esp. of touch. |
dyscrasia | noun (n.) An ill habit or state of the constitution; -- formerly regarded as dependent on a morbid condition of the blood and humors. |
dionysia | noun (n. pl.) Any of the festivals held in honor of the Olympian god Dionysus. They correspond to the Roman Bacchanalia; the greater Dionysia were held at Athens in March or April, and were celebrated with elaborate performances of both tragedies and comedies. |
ecclesia | noun (n.) The public legislative assembly of the Athenians. |
| noun (n.) A church, either as a body or as a building. |
eclampsia | noun (n.) A fancied perception of flashes of light, a symptom of epilepsy; hence, epilepsy itself; convulsions. |
ectasia | noun (n.) A dilatation of a hollow organ or of a canal. |
entasia | noun (n.) Tonic spasm; -- applied generically to denote any disease characterized by tonic spasms, as tetanus, trismus, etc. |
eupepsia | noun (n.) Alt. of Eupepsy |
euthanasia | noun (n.) An easy death; a mode of dying to be desired. |
fantasia | noun (n.) A continuous composition, not divided into what are called movements, or governed by the ordinary rules of musical design, but in which the author's fancy roves unrestricted by set form. |
frambaesia | noun (n.) The yaws. See Yaws. |
fuchsia | noun (n.) A genus of flowering plants having elegant drooping flowers, with four sepals, four petals, eight stamens, and a single pistil. They are natives of Mexico and South America. Double-flowered varieties are now common in cultivation. |
halesia | noun (n.) A genus of American shrubs containing several species, called snowdrop trees, or silver-bell trees. They have showy, white flowers, drooping on slender pedicels. |
hemianaesthesia | noun (n.) Anaesthesia upon one side of the body. |
hemiopsia | noun (n.) A defect of vision in consequence of which a person sees but half of an object looked at. |
hyperaesthesia | noun (n.) A state of exalted or morbidly increased sensibility of the body, or of a part of it. |
hyperesthesia | noun (n.) Same as Hyperaesthesia. |
hyperplasia | noun (n.) An increase in, or excessive growth of, the normal elements of any part. |
macroglossia | noun (n.) Enlargement or hypertrophy of the tongue. |
magnesia | noun (n.) A light earthy white substance, consisting of magnesium oxide, and obtained by heating magnesium hydrate or carbonate, or by burning magnesium. It has a slightly alkaline reaction, and is used in medicine as a mild antacid laxative. See Magnesium. |
monesia | noun (n.) The bark, or a vegetable extract brought in solid cakes from South America and believed to be derived from the bark, of the tree Chrysophyllum glycyphloeum. It is used as an alterative and astringent. |
neoplasia | noun (n.) Growth or development of new material; neoplasty. |
quassia | noun (n.) The wood of several tropical American trees of the order Simarubeae, as Quassia amara, Picraena excelsa, and Simaruba amara. It is intensely bitter, and is used in medicine and sometimes as a substitute for hops in making beer. |
| noun (n.) The wood of several tropical American trees of the order Simarubeae, as Quassia amara, Picraena excelsa, and Simaruba amara. It is intensely bitter, and is used in medicine and sometimes as a substitute for hops in making beer. |
palingenesia | noun (n.) See Palingenesis. |
parnassia | noun (n.) A genus of herbs growing in wet places, and having white flowers; grass of Parnassus. |
paronomasia | noun (n.) A play upon words; a figure by which the same word is used in different senses, or words similar in sound are set in opposition to each other, so as to give antithetical force to the sentence; punning. |
parousia | noun (n.) The nativity of our Lord. |
| noun (n.) The last day. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH CELOSİA (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 6 Letters (celosi) - Words That Begins with celosi:
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (celos) - Words That Begins with celos:
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (celo) - Words That Begins with celo:
celotomy | noun (n.) The act or operation of cutting, to relieve the structure in strangulated hernia. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (cel) - Words That Begins with cel:
celadon | noun (n.) A pale sea-green color; also, porcelain or fine pottery of this tint. |
celandine | noun (n.) A perennial herbaceous plant (Chelidonium majus) of the poppy family, with yellow flowers. It is used as a medicine in jaundice, etc., and its acrid saffron-colored juice is used to cure warts and the itch; -- called also greater celandine and swallowwort. |
celature | noun (n.) The act or art of engraving or embossing. |
| noun (n.) That which is engraved. |
celebrant | noun (n.) One who performs a public religious rite; -- applied particularly to an officiating priest in the Roman Catholic Church, as distinguished from his assistants. |
celebrating | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Celebrate |
celebrated | adjective (a.) Having celebrity; distinguished; renowned. |
| (imp. & p. p.) of Celebrate |
celebration | noun (n.) The act, process, or time of celebrating. |
celebrator | noun (n.) One who celebrates; a praiser. |
celebrious | adjective (a.) Famous. |
celebrity | noun (n.) Celebration; solemnization. |
| noun (n.) The state or condition of being celebrated; fame; renown; as, the celebrity of Washington. |
| noun (n.) A person of distinction or renown; -- usually in the plural; as, he is one of the celebrities of the place. |
celeriac | noun (n.) Turnip-rooted celery, a from of celery with a large globular root, which is used for food. |
celerity | noun (n.) Rapidity of motion; quickness; swiftness. |
celery | noun (n.) A plant of the Parsley family (Apium graveolens), of which the blanched leafstalks are used as a salad. |
celestial | noun (n.) An inhabitant of heaven. |
| noun (n.) A native of China. |
| noun (n.) A Chinaman; a Chinese. |
| adjective (a.) Belonging to the aerial regions, or visible heavens. |
| adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the spiritual heaven; heavenly; divine. |
| adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or characteristic of, the Chinese, or Celestial, Empire, of the Chinese people. |
celestine | noun (n.) Alt. of Celestite |
| noun (n.) Alt. of Celestinian |
celestite | noun (n.) Native strontium sulphate, a mineral so named from its occasional delicate blue color. It occurs crystallized, also in compact massive and fibrous forms. |
celestinian | noun (n.) A monk of the austere branch of the Franciscan Order founded by Celestine V. in the 13th centry. |
celiac | adjective (a.) See Coellac. |
| adjective (a.) Relating to the abdomen, or to the cavity of the abdomen. |
celibacy | noun (n.) The state of being unmarried; single life, esp. that of a bachelor, or of one bound by vows not to marry. |
celibate | noun (n.) Celibate state; celibacy. |
| noun (n.) One who is unmarried, esp. a bachelor, or one bound by vows not to marry. |
| adjective (a.) Unmarried; single; as, a celibate state. |
celibatist | noun (n.) One who lives unmarried. |
celidography | noun (n.) A description of apparent spots on the disk of the sun, or on planets. |
cell | noun (n.) A very small and close apartment, as in a prison or in a monastery or convent; the hut of a hermit. |
| noun (n.) A small religious house attached to a monastery or convent. |
| noun (n.) Any small cavity, or hollow place. |
| noun (n.) The space between the ribs of a vaulted roof. |
| noun (n.) Same as Cella. |
| noun (n.) A jar of vessel, or a division of a compound vessel, for holding the exciting fluid of a battery. |
| noun (n.) One of the minute elementary structures, of which the greater part of the various tissues and organs of animals and plants are composed. |
| verb (v. t.) To place or inclose in a cell. |
cella | noun (n.) The part inclosed within the walls of an ancient temple, as distinguished from the open porticoes. |
cellar | noun (n.) A room or rooms under a building, and usually below the surface of the ground, where provisions and other stores are kept. |
cellarage | noun (n.) The space or storerooms of a cellar; a cellar. |
| noun (n.) Chare for storage in a cellar. |
cellarer | noun (n.) A steward or butler of a monastery or chapter; one who has charge of procuring and keeping the provisions. |
cellaret | noun (n.) A receptacle, as in a dining room, for a few bottles of wine or liquor, made in the form of a chest or coffer, or a deep drawer in a sideboard, and usually lined with metal. |
cellarist | noun (n.) Same as Cellarer. |
celled | adjective (a.) Containing a cell or cells. |
| (imp. & p. p.) of Cell |
cellepore | noun (n.) A genus of delicate branching corals, made up of minute cells, belonging to the Bryozoa. |
celliferous | adjective (a.) Bearing or producing cells. |
cello | noun (n.) A contraction for Violoncello. |
cellular | adjective (a.) Consisting of, or containing, cells; of or pertaining to a cell or cells. |
cellulated | adjective (a.) Cellular. |
cellule | noun (n.) A small cell. |
celluliferous | adjective (a.) Bearing or producing little cells. |
cellulitis | noun (n.) An inflammantion of the cellular or areolar tissue, esp. of that lying immediately beneath the skin. |
celluloid | noun (n.) A substance composed essentially of gun cotton and camphor, and when pure resembling ivory in texture and color, but variously colored to imitate coral, tortoise shell, amber, malachite, etc. It is used in the manufacture of jewelry and many small articles, as combs, brushes, collars, and cuffs; -- originally called xylonite. |
cellulose | noun (n.) The substance which constitutes the essential part of the solid framework of plants, of ordinary wood, linen, paper, etc. It is also found to a slight extent in certain animals, as the tunicates. It is a carbohydrate, (C6H10O5)n, isomeric with starch, and is convertible into starches and sugars by the action of heat and acids. When pure, it is a white amorphous mass. See Starch, Granulose, Lignin. |
| adjective (a.) Consisting of, or containing, cells. |
celsiture | noun (n.) Height; altitude. |
celsius | noun (n.) The Celsius thermometer or scale, so called from Anders Celsius, a Swedish astronomer, who invented it. It is the same as the centigrade thermometer or scale. |
celt | noun (n.) One of an ancient race of people, who formerly inhabited a great part of Central and Western Europe, and whose descendants at the present day occupy Ireland, Wales, the Highlands of Scotland, and the northern shores of France. |
| noun (n.) A weapon or implement of stone or metal, found in the tumuli, or barrows, of the early Celtic nations. |
celtiberian | noun (n.) An inhabitant of Celtiberia. |
| adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the ancient Celtiberia (a district in Spain lying between the Ebro and the Tagus) or its inhabitants the Celtiberi (Celts of the river Iberus). |
celtic | noun (n.) The language of the Celts. |
| adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the Celts; as, Celtic people, tribes, literature, tongue. |
celticism | noun (n.) A custom of the Celts, or an idiom of their language. |
celtium | noun (n.) A supposed new element of the rare-earth group, accompanying lutecium and scandium in the gadolinite earths. Symbol, Ct (no period). |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH CELOSİA:
English Words which starts with 'cel' and ends with 'sia':
English Words which starts with 'ce' and ends with 'ia':
cecidomyia | noun (n.) A genus of small dipterous files, including several very injurious species, as the Hessian fly. See Hessian fly. |
cephalalgia | noun (n.) Alt. of Cephalalgy |
| noun (n.) Headache. |
ceratobranchia | noun (n. pl.) A group of nudibranchiate Mollusca having on the back papilliform or branched organs serving as gills. |
cercaria | noun (n.) The larval form of a trematode worm having the shape of a tadpole, with its body terminated by a tail-like appendage. |
cerealia | noun (n. pl.) Public festivals in honor of Ceres. |
| noun (n. pl.) The cereals. |
ceria | noun (n.) Cerium oxide, CeO2, a white infusible substance constituting about one per cent of the material of the common incandescent mantle. |