ENOS
First name ENOS's origin is Irish. ENOS means "one vigor". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with ENOS below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of enos.(Brown names are of the same origin (Irish) with ENOS and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming ENOS
FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES ENOS AS A WHOLE:
damaskenos xenosNAMES RHYMING WITH ENOS (According to last letters):
Rhyming Names According to Last 3 Letters (nos) - Names That Ends with nos:
kunagnos hypnos minos thanos janos kunsgnos turannos damaskinosRhyming Names According to Last 2 Letters (os) - Names That Ends with os:
aglauros aidoios eos kairos keleos hagos tewodros athangelos boghos gregos claudios sethos vernados abydos anteros athanasios baltsaros christos dhimitrios eleutherios haralambos helios hesperos icelos khristos kratos kyrillos kyros meletios nectarios ophelos orthros pandareos parthenios phantasos prokopios soterios stamitos thanatos zotikos fercos milagritos milagros remedios ambros carlos cristos isaakios marcos markos mikhos nikos oliverios pinochos ros santos togquos vemados zachaios ramos lapidos vasileios vasos titos theodosios otos nemos homeros eugenios eleftherios argos anastasios alcinoos asklepios carolos kinetikos demos firdoos amos iakovosNAMES RHYMING WITH ENOS (According to first letters):
Rhyming Names According to First 3 Letters (eno) - Names That Begins with eno:
eno enoch enok enolaRhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (en) - Names That Begins with en:
ena enando enapay enat encarnacion enceladus enda endre endymion ene enea eneas enerstina enerstyne engel engelbertha engelbertina engelbertine engjell engl englbehrt englebert engleberta engracia engres enid enide enit enite enkoodabao enkoodabaoo enkoodabooaoo ennea ennis enno enrica enrichetta enrico enriqua enrique enriqueta eny enya enyd enyeto enygeus enyo enzoNAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH ENOS:
First Names which starts with 'e' and ends with 's':
eadignes eames eblis eddis edris edrys egidius egomas eilis eirlys el-marees el-nefous eldoris elias eliaures elis ellis els elvis emrys epeius epopeus erasmus erebus erechtheus erichthonius erikas erinyes eris erymanthus esdras eteocles eubuleus eudosis eugenius eulises eumaeus eupeithes eurus euryalus eurylochus eurymachus eurypylus eurystheus eusebius eustatius eustisEnglish Words Rhyming ENOS
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES ENOS AS A WHOLE:
adenose | adjective (a.) Like a gland; full of glands; glandulous; adenous. |
anacoenosis | noun (n.) A figure by which a speaker appeals to his hearers or opponents for their opinion on the point in debate. |
arenose | adjective (a.) Sandy; full of sand. |
adenosclerosis | noun (n.) The hardening of a gland. |
baenosome | noun (n.) The thorax of Arthropods. |
bluenose | noun (n.) A nickname for a Nova Scotian. |
noun (n.) A Nova Scotian; also, a Nova Scotian ship (called also Blue"nos`er (/)); a Nova Scotian potato, etc. |
coenosarc | noun (n.) The common soft tissue which unites the polyps of a compound hydroid. See Hydroidea. |
ctenostomata | noun (n. pl.) A suborder of Bryozoa, usually having a circle of bristles below the tentacles. |
karyostenosis | noun (n.) Direct cell division (in which there is first a simple division of the nucleus, without any changes in its structure, followed by division of the protoplasm of the karyostenotic mode of nuclear division. |
menostasis | noun (n.) Stoppage of the mences. |
menostation | noun (n.) Same as Menostasis. |
phenose | noun (n.) A sweet amorphous deliquescent substance obtained indirectly from benzene, and isometric with, and resembling, dextrose. |
phrenosin | noun (n.) A nitrogenous body, related to cerebrin, supposed to exist in the brain. |
prenostic | noun (n.) A prognostic; an omen. |
solenostomi | noun (n. pl.) A tribe of lophobranch fishes having a tubular snout. The female carries the eggs in a ventral pouch. |
stenosis | noun (n.) A narrowing of the opening or hollow of any passage, tube, or orifice; as, stenosis of the pylorus. It differs from stricture in being applied especially to diffused rather than localized contractions, and in always indicating an origin organic and not spasmodic. |
stenostome | adjective (a.) Having a small or narrow mouth; -- said of certain small ground snakes (Opoterodonta), which are unable to dilate their jaws. |
tenosynovitis | noun (n.) Inflammation of the synovial sheath enveloping a tendon. |
noun (n.) Inflammation of the synovial sheath of a tendon. |
tenositis | noun (n.) Inflammation of a tendon. |
venenose | adjective (a.) Poisonous. |
venose | adjective (a.) Having numerous or conspicuous veins; veiny; as, a venose frond. |
venosity | noun (n.) The quality or state of being venous. |
noun (n.) A condition in which the circulation is retarded, and the entire mass of blood is less oxygenated than it normally is. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ENOS (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (nos) - English Words That Ends with nos:
emprosthotonos | noun (n.) A drawing of the body forward, in consequence of the spasmodic action of some of the muscles. |
finos | noun (n. pl.) Second best wool from Merino sheep. |
holethnos | noun (n.) A parent stock or race of people, not yet divided into separate branches or tribes. |
minos | noun (n.) A king and lawgiver of Crete, fabled to be the son of Jupiter and Europa. After death he was made a judge in the Lower Regions. |
opisthotonos | noun (n.) A tetanic spasm in which the body is bent backwards and stiffened. |
strychnos | noun (n.) A genus of tropical trees and shrubs of the order Loganiaceae. See Nux vomica. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ENOS (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (eno) - Words That Begins with eno:
enodal | adjective (a.) Without a node. |
enodation | noun (n.) The act or operation of clearing of knots, or of untying; hence, also, the solution of a difficulty. |
enoint | adjective (a.) Anointed. |
enomotarch | noun (n.) The commander of an enomoty. |
enomoty | noun (n.) A band of sworn soldiers; a division of the Spartan army ranging from twenty-five to thirty-six men, bound together by oath. |
enopla | noun (n. pl.) One of the orders of Nemertina, characterized by the presence of a peculiar armature of spines or plates in the proboscis. |
enoptomancy | noun (n.) Divination by the use of a mirror. |
enorm | adjective (a.) Enormous. |
enormity | noun (n.) The state or quality of exceeding a measure or rule, or of being immoderate, monstrous, or outrageous. |
noun (n.) That which is enormous; especially, an exceeding offense against order, right, or decency; an atrocious crime; flagitious villainy; an atrocity. |
enormous | adjective (a.) Exceeding the usual rule, norm, or measure; out of due proportion; inordinate; abnormal. |
adjective (a.) Exceedingly wicked; outrageous; atrocious; monstrous; as, an enormous crime. |
enormousness | noun (n.) The state of being enormous. |
enorthotrope | noun (n.) An optical toy; a card on which confused or imperfect figures are drawn, but which form to the eye regular figures when the card is rapidly revolved. See Thaumatrope. |
enough | noun (n.) A sufficiency; a quantity which satisfies desire, is adequate to the want, or is equal to the power or ability; as, he had enough to do take care of himself. |
adjective (a.) Satisfying desire; giving content; adequate to meet the want; sufficient; -- usually, and more elegantly, following the noun to which it belongs. | |
adverb (adv.) In a degree or quantity that satisfies; to satisfaction; sufficiently. | |
adverb (adv.) Fully; quite; -- used to express slight augmentation of the positive degree, and sometimes equivalent to very; as, he is ready enough to embrace the offer. | |
adverb (adv.) In a tolerable degree; -- used to express mere acceptableness or acquiescence, and implying a degree or quantity rather less than is desired; as, the song was well enough. | |
(interj.) An exclamation denoting sufficiency, being a shortened form of it is enough. |
enouncing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Enounce |
enouncement | noun (n.) Act of enouncing; that which is enounced. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH ENOS:
English Words which starts with 'e' and ends with 's':
esthetics | noun (n.) The theory or philosophy of taste; the science of the beautiful in nature and art; esp. that which treats of the expression and embodiment of beauty by art. |
noun (n.) Same as Aesthete, Aesthetic, Aesthetical, Aesthetics, etc. |
eagerness | noun (n.) The state or quality of being eager; ardent desire. |
noun (n.) Tartness; sourness. |
eagless | noun (n.) A female or hen eagle. |
eagrass | noun (n.) See Eddish. |
eariness | noun (n.) Fear or timidity, especially of something supernatural. |
earless | adjective (a.) Without ears; hence, deaf or unwilling to hear. |
earliness | noun (n.) The state of being early or forward; promptness. |
earnestness | noun (n.) The state or quality of being earnest; intentness; anxiety. |
earthiness | noun (n.) The quality or state of being earthy, or of containing earth; hence, grossness. |
earthliness | noun (n.) The quality or state of being earthly; worldliness; grossness; perishableness. |
earwitness | noun (n.) A witness by means of his ears; one who is within hearing and does hear; a hearer. |
easeless | adjective (a.) Without ease. |
easiness | noun (n.) The state or condition of being easy; freedom from distress; rest. |
noun (n.) Freedom from difficulty; ease; as the easiness of a task. | |
noun (n.) Freedom from emotion; compliance; disposition to yield without opposition; unconcernedness. | |
noun (n.) Freedom from effort, constraint, or formality; -- said of style, manner, etc. | |
noun (n.) Freedom from jolting, jerking, or straining. |
eaves | noun (n. pl.) The edges or lower borders of the roof of a building, which overhang the walls, and cast off the water that falls on the roof. |
noun (n. pl.) Brow; ridge. | |
noun (n. pl.) Eyelids or eyelashes. |
eblis | noun (n.) The prince of the evil spirits; Satan. |
ebrious | adjective (a.) Inclined to drink to excess; intoxicated; tipsy. |
ecardines | noun (n. pl.) An order of Brachiopoda; the Lyopomata. See Brachiopoda. |
ecbasis | noun (n.) A figure in which the orator treats of things according to their events consequences. |
ecchymosis | noun (n.) A livid or black and blue spot, produced by the extravasation or effusion of blood into the areolar tissue from a contusion. |
ecclesiastes | adjective (a.) One of the canonical books of the Old Testament. |
ecclesiasticus | noun (n.) A book of the Apocrypha. |
ecdysis | noun (n.) The act of shedding, or casting off, an outer cuticular layer, as in the case of serpents, lobsters, etc.; a coming out; as, the ecdysis of the pupa from its shell; exuviation. |
echinococcus | noun (n.) A parasite of man and of many domestic and wild animals, forming compound cysts or tumors (called hydatid cysts) in various organs, but especially in the liver and lungs, which often cause death. It is the larval stage of the Taenia echinococcus, a small tapeworm peculiar to the dog. |
echinodermatous | adjective (a.) Relating to Echinodermata; echinodermal. |
echinus | noun (n.) A hedgehog. |
noun (n.) A genus of echinoderms, including the common edible sea urchin of Europe. | |
noun (n.) The rounded molding forming the bell of the capital of the Grecian Doric style, which is of a peculiar elastic curve. See Entablature. | |
noun (n.) The quarter-round molding (ovolo) of the Roman Doric style. See Illust. of Column | |
noun (n.) A name sometimes given to the egg and anchor or egg and dart molding, because that ornament is often identified with Roman Doric capital. The name probably alludes to the shape of the shell of the sea urchin. |
echoless | adjective (a.) Without echo or response. |
economics | noun (n.) The science of household affairs, or of domestic management. |
noun (n.) Political economy; the science of the utilities or the useful application of wealth or material resources. See Political economy, under Political. |
ecphasis | noun (n.) An explicit declaration. |
ecphonesis | noun (n.) An animated or passionate exclamation. |
ectasis | noun (n.) The lengthening of a syllable from short to long. |
ecthlipsis | noun (n.) The dropping out or suppression from a word of a consonant, with or without a vowel. |
noun (n.) The elision of a final m, with the preceding vowel, before a word beginning with a vowel. |
ectostosis | noun (n.) A process of bone formation in which ossification takes place in the perichondrium and either surrounds or gradually replaces the cartilage. |
eczematous | adjective (a.) Pertaining to eczema; having the characteristic of eczema. |
edacious | adjective (a.) Given to eating; voracious; devouring. |
eddoes | noun (n. pl.) The tubers of Colocasia antiquorum. See Taro. |
edelweiss | noun (n.) A little, perennial, white, woolly plant (Leontopodium alpinum), growing at high elevations in the Alps. |
edematous | adjective (a.) Alt. of Edematose |
edentalous | adjective (a.) See Edentate, a. |
edentulous | adjective (a.) Toothless. |
edgeless | adjective (a.) Without an edge; not sharp; blunt; obtuse; as, an edgeless sword or weapon. |
edibleness | noun (n.) Suitableness for being eaten. |
editress | noun (n.) A female editor. |
edriophthalmous | adjective (a.) Pertaining to the Edriophthalma. |
edulious | adjective (a.) Edible. |
eelgrass | noun (n.) A plant (Zostera marina), with very long and narrow leaves, growing abundantly in shallow bays along the North Atlantic coast. |
effectiveness | noun (n.) The quality of being effective. |
effectless | adjective (a.) Without effect or advantage; useless; bootless. |
effectualness | noun (n.) The quality of being effectual. |
effectuous | adjective (a.) Effective. |
effeminateness | noun (n.) The state of being effeminate; unmanly softness. |
efferous | adjective (a.) Like a wild beast; fierce. |
efficacious | noun (n.) Possessing the quality of being effective; productive of, or powerful to produce, the effect intended; as, an efficacious law. |
effigies | noun (n.) See Effigy. |
(pl. ) of Effigy |
effortless | adjective (a.) Making no effort. |
egilops | noun (n.) See Aegilops. |
eglandulous | adjective (a.) Destitute of glands. |
egregious | adjective (a.) Surpassing; extraordinary; distinguished (in a bad sense); -- formerly used with words importing a good quality, but now joined with words having a bad sense; as, an egregious rascal; an egregious ass; an egregious mistake. |
egregiousness | noun (n.) The state of being egregious. |
egress | noun (n.) The act of going out or leaving, or the power to leave; departure. |
noun (n.) The passing off from the sun's disk of an inferior planet, in a transit. | |
verb (v. i.) To go out; to depart; to leave. |
elaeagnus | noun (n.) A genus of shrubs or small trees, having the foliage covered with small silvery scales; oleaster. |
elaeis | noun (n.) A genus of palms. |
elaps | noun (n.) A genus of venomous snakes found both in America and the Old World. Many species are known. See Coral snake, under Coral. |
elasmosaurus | noun (n.) An extinct, long-necked, marine, cretaceous reptile from Kansas, allied to Plesiosaurus. |
elasticness | noun (n.) The quality of being elastic; elasticity. |
elatedness | noun (n.) The state of being elated. |
electoress | noun (n.) An electress. |
electress | noun (n.) The wife or widow of an elector in the old German empire. |
electricalness | adjective (a.) The state or quality of being electrical. |
electrogenesis | noun (n.) Same as Electrogeny. |
electrolysis | noun (n.) The act or process of chemical decomposition, by the action of electricity; as, the electrolysis of silver or nickel for plating; the electrolysis of water. |
electrophorus | noun (n.) An instrument for exciting electricity, and repeating the charge indefinitely by induction, consisting of a flat cake of resin, shelllac, or ebonite, upon which is placed a plate of metal. |
electrostatics | noun (n.) That branch of science which treats of statical electricity or electric force in a state of rest. |
electrotonous | adjective (a.) Electrotonic. |
electrotonus | noun (n.) The modified condition of a nerve, when a constant current of electricity passes through any part of it. See Anelectrotonus, and Catelectrotonus. |
elementariness | noun (n.) The state of being elementary; original simplicity; uncompounded state. |
elenchus | noun (n.) Same as Elench. |
elengeness | noun (n.) Loneliness; misery. |
elephantiasis | noun (n.) A disease of the skin, in which it become enormously thickened, and is rough, hard, and fissured, like an elephant's hide. |
elevatedness | noun (n.) The quality of being elevated. |
elfishness | noun (n.) The quality of being elfish. |
eligibleness | noun (n.) The quality worthy or qualified to be chosen; suitableness; desirableness. |
ellipsis | noun (n.) Omission; a figure of syntax, by which one or more words, which are obviously understood, are omitted; as, the virtues I admire, for, the virtues which I admire. |
noun (n.) An ellipse. |
elops | noun (n.) A genus of fishes. See Saury. |
noun (n.) A mythical serpent. |
embassadress | noun (n.) Same as Ambassadress. |
emberings | noun (n. pl.) Ember days. |
embolus | noun (n.) Something inserted, as a wedge; the piston or sucker of a pump or syringe. |
noun (n.) A plug of some substance lodged in a blood vessel, being brought thither by the blood current. It consists most frequently of a clot of fibrin, a detached shred of a morbid growth, a globule of fat, or a microscopic organism. |
embryoniferous | adjective (a.) Having an embryo. |
embryous | adjective (a.) Embryonic; undeveloped. |
emeritus | noun (n.) A veteran who has honorably completed his service. |
adjective (a.) Honorably discharged from the performance of public duty on account of age, infirmity, or long and faithful services; -- said of an officer of a college or pastor of a church. |
emerods | noun (n. pl.) Alt. of Emeroids |
emeroids | noun (n. pl.) Hemorrhoids; piles; tumors; boils. |
emesis | noun (n.) A vomiting. |
emissitious | adjective (a.) Looking, or narrowly examining; prying. |
emotiveness | noun (n.) Susceptibility to emotion. |
emperess | noun (n.) See Empress. |
emphasis | noun (n.) A particular stress of utterance, or force of voice, given in reading and speaking to one or more words whose signification the speaker intends to impress specially upon his audience. |
noun (n.) A peculiar impressiveness of expression or weight of thought; vivid representation, enforcing assent; as, to dwell on a subject with great emphasis. |
emphaticalness | noun (n.) The quality of being emphatic; emphasis. |
emphysematous | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or of the nature of, emphysema; swelled; bloated. |
emphyteusis | noun (n.) A real right, susceptible of assignment and of descent, charged on productive real estate, the right being coupled with the enjoyment of the property on condition of taking care of the estate and paying taxes, and sometimes a small rent. |
empress | noun (n.) The consort of an emperor. |
noun (n.) A female sovereign. | |
noun (n.) A sovereign mistress. |