ELECTRA
First name ELECTRA's origin is Greek. ELECTRA means "sparkling". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with ELECTRA below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of electra.(Brown names are of the same origin (Greek) with ELECTRA and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming ELECTRA
FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES ELECTRA AS A WHOLE:
NAMES RHYMING WITH ELECTRA (According to last letters):
Rhyming Names According to Last 6 Letters (lectra) - Names That Ends with lectra:
Rhyming Names According to Last 5 Letters (ectra) - Names That Ends with ectra:
Rhyming Names According to Last 4 Letters (ctra) - Names That Ends with ctra:
Rhyming Names According to Last 3 Letters (tra) - Names That Ends with tra:
estra astra cleopatra clytemnestra hypermnestra kleopatra chaitra pietra dumitra anitra petra mytraRhyming Names According to Last 2 Letters (ra) - Names That Ends with ra:
asura aurora azmera chinara efra iyangura japera katura nadra sanura tandra zuhura moira soumra adra aludra alzubra badra bahira bushra johara nasira noura samira thara' yusra gadara adora chamorra senora thora dendera kakra mukamutara mukantagara sagira shukura subira zahra azura ceara abdera aethra aldara ara calandra cassandra cynara cyra cythera deianira dora fedora hemera hera hilaeira hydra isadora isaura lysandra madora marmara metanira musidora pandora phaedra pheodora sapphira theodora theora thera vara adira afra zemira candra chandara chandra kawindra nidra odra pandara sakra saura sitara zudora tara allegraNAMES RHYMING WITH ELECTRA (According to first letters):
Rhyming Names According to First 6 Letters (electr) - Names That Begins with electr:
Rhyming Names According to First 5 Letters (elect) - Names That Begins with elect:
Rhyming Names According to First 4 Letters (elec) - Names That Begins with elec:
Rhyming Names According to First 3 Letters (ele) - Names That Begins with ele:
eleadora eleanor eleanora eleazar eleena elefteria eleftherios elek elena elene eleni elenora eleonora eleonore eleora elepheteria eleta elethea elethia eleuia eleutherios elexaRhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (el) - Names That Begins with el:
el-marees el-nefous el-saraya elaina elaine elam elan elana elayna elayne elazar elazaro elbert elberta elberte elberti elbertina elbertine elbertyna elcie elda eldan elden elder eldon eldora eldoris eldred eldreda eldrian eldrick eldrid eldrida eldride eldridge eldur eldwin eldwyn elfie elfreda elfrida elfried elfrieda elga elgin elgine elhanan eli elia eliana eliane elias eliaures eliazar elica elicia elida elidor elidure elienor eliezer elihu elija elijah elim elimu elina elinor elinore eliora eliot eliott elis elisa elisa-mae elisabet elisabeta elisabethNAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH ELECTRA:
First Names which starts with 'ele' and ends with 'tra':
First Names which starts with 'el' and ends with 'ra':
elmira elmyra elnora elora elvera elvira elziraFirst Names which starts with 'e' and ends with 'a':
eada eadda eadwiella ealga eara earlena earlina earna earnestyna eartha earwyna eathellreda ebba ebissa ecaterina echa echidna eda edana edda edelina edenia edina edita editha editta edla edmanda edmonda edmunda edna edorta edra edrea eduarda edva edwa edwina edwinna edytha eeva eferhilda efia efthemia egberta egbertina egeria egesa eglantina eguskina eidothea eila eileithyia eilena eilinora eirica eisa eithna eja ejona ekaterina elisabetta elisaveta elisha elishama elisheba elisheva elishia eliska elissa elita elivina eliza elizabetta elizaveta elka ella ellecia ellena ellia ellisha elma eloisa elpida elsa elsha elthia elva elvena elvia elvina elvinia elvitaEnglish Words Rhyming ELECTRA
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES ELECTRA AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ELECTRA (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 6 Letters (lectra) - English Words That Ends with lectra:
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (ectra) - English Words That Ends with ectra:
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (ctra) - English Words That Ends with ctra:
mactra | noun (n.) Any marine bivalve shell of the genus Mactra, and allied genera. Many species are known. Some of them are used as food, as Mactra stultorum, of Europe. See Surf clam, under Surf. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (tra) - English Words That Ends with tra:
arthrogastra | noun (n. pl.) A division of the Arachnida, having the abdomen annulated, including the scorpions, harvestmen, etc.; pedipalpi. |
brachelytra | noun (n. pl.) A group of beetles having short elytra, as the rove beetles. |
calyptra | noun (n.) A little hood or veil, resembling an extinguisher in form and position, covering each of the small flasklike capsules which contain the spores of mosses; also, any similar covering body. |
chittra | noun (n.) The axis deer of India. |
conistra | noun (n.) Originally, a part of the palestra, or gymnasium among the Greeks; either the place where sand was stored for use in sprinkling the wrestlers, or the wrestling ground itself. Hence, a part of the orchestra of the Greek theater. |
dicentra | noun (n.) A genus of herbaceous plants, with racemes of two-spurred or heart-shaped flowers, including the Dutchman's breeches, and the more showy Bleeding heart (D. spectabilis). |
dielytra | noun (n.) See Dicentra. |
dioptra | noun (n.) An optical instrument, invented by Hipparchus, for taking altitudes, leveling, etc. |
extra | noun (n.) Something in addition to what is due, expected, or customary; something in addition to the regular charge or compensation, or for which an additional charge is made; as, at European hotels lights are extras. |
noun (n.) Something in addition to what is due, expected, or customary; esp., an added charge or fee, or something for which an additional charge is made. | |
noun (n.) An edition of a newspaper issued at a time other than the regular one. | |
noun (n.) A run, as from a bye, credited to the general score but not made from a hit. | |
noun (n.) Something of an extra quality or grade. | |
adjective (a.) Beyond what is due, usual, expected, or necessary; additional; supernumerary; also, extraordinarily good; superior; as, extra work; extra pay. |
fenestra | noun (n.) A small opening; esp., one of the apertures, closed by membranes, between the tympanum and internal ear. |
foutra | noun (n.) A fig; -- a word of contempt. |
mantra | noun (n.) A prayer; an invocation; a religious formula; a charm. |
mostra | noun (n.) See Direct, n. |
orchestra | noun (n.) The space in a theater between the stage and the audience; -- originally appropriated by the Greeks to the chorus and its evolutions, afterward by the Romans to persons of distinction, and by the moderns to a band of instrumental musicians. |
noun (n.) The place in any public hall appropriated to a band of instrumental musicians. | |
noun (n.) Loosely: A band of instrumental musicians performing in a theater, concert hall, or other place of public amusement. | |
noun (n.) Strictly: A band suitable for the performance of symphonies, overtures, etc., as well as for the accompaniment of operas, oratorios, cantatas, masses, and the like, or of vocal and instrumental solos. | |
noun (n.) A band composed, for the largest part, of players of the various viol instruments, many of each kind, together with a proper complement of wind instruments of wood and brass; -- as distinguished from a military or street band of players on wind instruments, and from an assemblage of solo players for the rendering of concerted pieces, such as septets, octets, and the like. | |
noun (n.) The instruments employed by a full band, collectively; as, an orchestra of forty stringed instruments, with proper complement of wind instruments. |
palaestra | noun (n.) See Palestra. |
palestra | noun (n.) A wrestling school; hence, a gymnasium, or place for athletic exercise in general. |
noun (n.) A wrestling; the exercise of wrestling. |
rostra | noun (n. pl.) See Rostrum, 2. |
(pl. ) of Rostrum |
sastra | noun (n.) Same as Shaster. |
shastra | noun (n.) A treatise for authoritative instruction among the Hindoos; a book of institutes; especially, a treatise explaining the Vedas. |
solenogastra | noun (n. pl.) An order of lowly organized Mollusca belonging to the Isopleura. A narrow groove takes the place of the foot of other gastropods. |
sutra | noun (n.) A precept; an aphorism; a brief rule. |
noun (n.) A collection of such aphorisms. | |
noun (n.) A body of Hindoo literature containing aphorisms on grammar, meter, law, and philosophy, and forming a connecting link between the Vedic and later Sanscrit literature. |
tantra | noun (n.) A ceremonial treatise related to Puranic and magic literature; esp., one of the sacred works of the worshipers of Sakti. |
ultra | noun (n.) One who advocates extreme measures; an ultraist; an extremist; a radical. |
adjective (a.) Going beyond others, or beyond due limit; extreme; fanatical; uncompromising; as, an ultra reformer; ultra measures. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ELECTRA (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 6 Letters (electr) - Words That Begins with electr:
electre | noun (n.) Alt. of Electer |
electrepeter | noun (n.) An instrument used to change the direction of electric currents; a commutator. |
electress | noun (n.) The wife or widow of an elector in the old German empire. |
electric | noun (n.) A nonconductor of electricity, as amber, glass, resin, etc., employed to excite or accumulate electricity. |
adjective (a.) Alt. of Electrical |
electrical | adjective (a.) Pertaining to electricity; consisting of, containing, derived from, or produced by, electricity; as, electric power or virtue; an electric jar; electric effects; an electric spark. |
adjective (a.) Capable of occasioning the phenomena of electricity; as, an electric or electrical machine or substance. | |
adjective (a.) Electrifying; thrilling; magnetic. |
electricalness | adjective (a.) The state or quality of being electrical. |
electrician | noun (n.) An investigator of electricity; one versed in the science of electricity. |
electricity | noun (n.) A power in nature, a manifestation of energy, exhibiting itself when in disturbed equilibrium or in activity by a circuit movement, the fact of direction in which involves polarity, or opposition of properties in opposite directions; also, by attraction for many substances, by a law involving attraction between surfaces of unlike polarity, and repulsion between those of like; by exhibiting accumulated polar tension when the circuit is broken; and by producing heat, light, concussion, and often chemical changes when the circuit passes between the poles or through any imperfectly conducting substance or space. It is generally brought into action by any disturbance of molecular equilibrium, whether from a chemical, physical, or mechanical, cause. |
noun (n.) The science which unfolds the phenomena and laws of electricity; electrical science. | |
noun (n.) Fig.: Electrifying energy or characteristic. |
electrifiable | adjective (a.) Capable of receiving electricity, or of being charged with it. |
electrification | noun (n.) The act of electrifying, or the state of being charged with electricity. |
electrifying | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Electrify |
noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Electrify |
electrine | adjective (a.) Belonging to, or made of, amber. |
adjective (a.) Made of electrum, an alloy used by the ancients. |
electrition | noun (n.) The recognition by an animal body of the electrical condition of external objects. |
electrization | noun (n.) The act of electrizing; electrification. |
electrizing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Electrize |
electrizer | noun (n.) One who, or that which, electrizes. |
electro | noun (n.) An electrotype. |
electrode | noun (n.) The path by which electricity is conveyed into or from a solution or other conducting medium; esp., the ends of the wires or conductors, leading from source of electricity, and terminating in the medium traversed by the current. |
electrogenesis | noun (n.) Same as Electrogeny. |
electrogenic | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to electrogenesis; as, an electrogenic condition. |
electrogeny | noun (n.) A term sometimes applied to the effects (tetanus) produced in the muscles of the limbs, when a current of electricity is passed along the spinal cord or nerves. |
electrograph | noun (n.) A mark, record, or tracing, made by the action of electricity. |
noun (n.) An apparatus, controlled by electric devices, used to trace designs for etching. | |
noun (n.) An instrument for the reproduction at a distance of pictures, maps, etc., by means of electricity. | |
noun (n.) An image made by the Rontgen rays; a sciagraph. | |
noun (n.) A cinematograph using the arc light. |
electrolier | noun (n.) A branching frame, often of ornamental design, to support electric illuminating lamps. |
electrology | noun (n.) That branch of physical science which treats of the phenomena of electricity and its properties. |
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. |
electrolyte | noun (n.) A compound decomposable, or subjected to decomposition, by an electric current. |
electrolytic | adjective (a.) Alt. of Electrolytical |
electrolytical | adjective (a.) Pertaining to electrolysis; as, electrolytic action. |
electrolyzable | adjective (a.) Capable of being electrolyzed, or decomposed by electricity. |
electrolyzation | noun (n.) The act or the process of electrolyzing. |
electrolyzing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Electrolyze |
electrometer | noun (n.) An instrument for measuring the quantity or intensity of electricity; also, sometimes, and less properly, applied to an instrument which indicates the presence of electricity (usually called an electroscope). |
electromotor | noun (n.) A mover or exciter of electricity; as apparatus for generating a current of electricity. |
noun (n.) An apparatus or machine for producing motion and mechanical effects by the action of electricity; an electro-magnetic engine. |
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. |
electropathy | noun (n.) The treatment of disease by electricity. |
electrophone | noun (n.) An instrument for producing sound by means of electric currents. |
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. |
electroplater | noun (n.) One who electroplates. |
electroplating | noun (n.) The art or process of depositing a coating (commonly) of silver, gold, or nickel on an inferior metal, by means of electricity. |
(imp. & p. p.) of Electroplate |
electroscope | noun (n.) An instrument for detecting the presence of electricity, or changes in the electric state of bodies, or the species of electricity present, as by means of pith balls, and the like. |
electroscopic | adjective (a.) Relating to, or made by means of, the electroscope. |
electrostatic | adjective (a.) Pertaining to electrostatics. |
electrostatics | noun (n.) That branch of science which treats of statical electricity or electric force in a state of rest. |
electrotonic | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to electrical tension; -- said of a supposed peculiar condition of a conducting circuit during its exposure to the action of another conducting circuit traversed by a uniform electric current when both circuits remain stationary. |
adjective (a.) Relating to electrotonus; as, the electrotonic condition of a nerve. |
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. |
electrotype | noun (n.) A facsimile plate made by electrotypy for use in printing; also, an impression or print from such plate. Also used adjectively. |
verb (v. t.) To make facsimile plates of by the electrotype process; as, to electrotype a page of type, a book, etc. See Electrotype, n. |
electrotyping | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Electrotype |
noun (n.) The act or the process of making electrotypes. |
electrotyper | noun (n.) One who electrotypes. |
electrotypic | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or effected by means of, electrotypy. |
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (elect) - Words That Begins with elect:
elect | noun (n.) One chosen or set apart. |
noun (n.) Those who are chosen for salvation. | |
adjective (a.) Chosen; taken by preference from among two or more. | |
adjective (a.) Chosen as the object of mercy or divine favor; set apart to eternal life. | |
adjective (a.) Chosen to an office, but not yet actually inducted into it; as, bishop elect; governor or mayor elect. | |
verb (v. t.) To pick out; to select; to choose. | |
verb (v. t.) To select or take for an office; to select by vote; as, to elect a representative, a president, or a governor. | |
verb (v. t.) To designate, choose, or select, as an object of mercy or favor. |
electing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Elect |
electant | noun (n.) One who has the power of choosing; an elector. |
electary | noun (n.) See Electuary. |
electic | adjective (a.) See Eclectic. |
electicism | noun (n.) See Eclecticism. |
election | adjective (a.) The act of choosing; choice; selection. |
adjective (a.) The act of choosing a person to fill an office, or to membership in a society, as by ballot, uplifted hands, or viva voce; as, the election of a president or a mayor. | |
adjective (a.) Power of choosing; free will; liberty to choose or act. | |
adjective (a.) Discriminating choice; discernment. | |
adjective (a.) Divine choice; predestination of individuals as objects of mercy and salvation; -- one of the "five points" of Calvinism. | |
adjective (a.) The choice, made by a party, of two alternatives, by taking one of which, the chooser is excluded from the other. | |
adjective (a.) Those who are elected. |
electioneering | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Electioneer |
electioneerer | noun (n.) One who electioneers. |
elective | noun (n.) In an American college, an optional study or course of study. |
adjective (a.) Exerting the power of choice; selecting; as, an elective act. | |
adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or consisting in, choice, or right of choosing; electoral. | |
adjective (a.) Dependent on choice; bestowed or passing by election; as, an elective study; an elective office. |
elector | noun (n.) One who elects, or has the right of choice; a person who is entitled to take part in an election, or to give his vote in favor of a candidate for office. |
noun (n.) Hence, specifically, in any country, a person legally qualified to vote. | |
noun (n.) In the old German empire, one of the princes entitled to choose the emperor. | |
noun (n.) One of the persons chosen, by vote of the people in the United States, to elect the President and Vice President. | |
adjective (a.) Pertaining to an election or to electors. |
electorality | noun (n.) The territory or dignity of an elector; electorate. |
electorate | noun (n.) The territory, jurisdiction, or dignity of an elector, as in the old German empire. |
noun (n.) The whole body of persons in a nation or state who are entitled to vote in an election, or any distinct class or division of them. |
electoress | noun (n.) An electress. |
electorial | adjective (a.) Electoral. |
electorship | noun (n.) The office or status of an elector. |
electer | noun (n.) Amber. See Electrum. |
noun (n.) A metallic substance compounded of gold and silver; an alloy. |
electrotypy | noun (n.) The process of producing electrotype plates. See Note under Electrotype, n. |
electrum | noun (n.) Amber. |
noun (n.) An alloy of gold and silver, of an amber color, used by the ancients. | |
noun (n.) German-silver plate. See German silver, under German. |
electuary | noun (n.) A medicine composed of powders, or other ingredients, incorporated with some convserve, honey, or sirup; a confection. See the note under Confection. |
electrographic | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to an electrograph or electrography. |
electrography | noun (n.) The art or process of making electrographs or using an electrograph. |
noun (n.) = Galvanography. |
electronic | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to an electron or electrons. |
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (elec) - Words That Begins with elec:
elecampane | noun (n.) A large, coarse herb (Inula Helenium), with composite yellow flowers. The root, which has a pungent taste, is used as a tonic, and was formerly of much repute as a stomachic. |
noun (n.) A sweetmeat made from the root of the plant. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (ele) - Words That Begins with ele:
eleatic | noun (n.) A philosopher of the Eleatic school. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to a certain school of Greek philosophers who taught that the only certain science is that which owes nothing to the senses, and all to the reason. |
eleaticism | noun (n.) The Eleatic doctrine. |
elextrometry | noun (n.) The art or process of making electrical measurements. |
eleemosynary | noun (n.) One who subsists on charity; a dependent. |
adjective (a.) Relating to charity, alms, or almsgiving; intended for the distribution of charity; as, an eleemosynary corporation. | |
adjective (a.) Given in charity or alms; having the nature of alms; as, eleemosynary assistance. | |
adjective (a.) Supported by charity; as, eleemosynary poor. |
elegance | noun (n.) Alt. of Elegancy |
elegancy | noun (n.) The state or quality of being elegant; beauty as resulting from choice qualities and the complete absence of what deforms or impresses unpleasantly; grace given by art or practice; fine polish; refinement; -- said of manners, language, style, form, architecture, etc. |
noun (n.) That which is elegant; that which is tasteful and highly attractive. |
elegant | adjective (a.) Very choice, and hence, pleasing to good taste; characterized by grace, propriety, and refinement, and the absence of every thing offensive; exciting admiration and approbation by symmetry, completeness, freedom from blemish, and the like; graceful; tasteful and highly attractive; as, elegant manners; elegant style of composition; an elegant speaker; an elegant structure. |
adjective (a.) Exercising a nice choice; discriminating beauty or sensitive to beauty; as, elegant taste. |
elegiac | noun (n.) Elegiac verse. |
adjective (a.) Belonging to elegy, or written in elegiacs; plaintive; expressing sorrow or lamentation; as, an elegiac lay; elegiac strains. | |
adjective (a.) Used in elegies; as, elegiac verse; the elegiac distich or couplet, consisting of a dactylic hexameter and pentameter. |
elegiacal | adjective (a.) Elegiac. |
elegiast | noun (n.) One who composes elegies. |
elegiographer | noun (n.) An elegist. |
elegist | noun (n.) A write of elegies. |
elegit | noun (n.) A judicial writ of execution, by which a defendant's goods are appraised and delivered to the plaintiff, and, if not sufficient to satisfy the debt, all of his lands are delivered, to be held till the debt is paid by the rents and profits, or until the defendant's interest has expired. |
elegy | noun (n.) A mournful or plaintive poem; a funereal song; a poem of lamentation. |
eleidin | noun (n.) Lifeless matter deposited in the form of minute granules within the protoplasm of living cells. |
element | noun (n.) One of the simplest or essential parts or principles of which anything consists, or upon which the constitution or fundamental powers of anything are based. |
noun (n.) One of the ultimate, undecomposable constituents of any kind of matter. Specifically: (Chem.) A substance which cannot be decomposed into different kinds of matter by any means at present employed; as, the elements of water are oxygen and hydrogen. | |
noun (n.) One of the ultimate parts which are variously combined in anything; as, letters are the elements of written language; hence, also, a simple portion of that which is complex, as a shaft, lever, wheel, or any simple part in a machine; one of the essential ingredients of any mixture; a constituent part; as, quartz, feldspar, and mica are the elements of granite. | |
noun (n.) One out of several parts combined in a system of aggregation, when each is of the nature of the whole; as, a single cell is an element of the honeycomb. | |
noun (n.) One of the smallest natural divisions of the organism, as a blood corpuscle, a muscular fiber. | |
noun (n.) One of the simplest essential parts, more commonly called cells, of which animal and vegetable organisms, or their tissues and organs, are composed. | |
noun (n.) An infinitesimal part of anything of the same nature as the entire magnitude considered; as, in a solid an element may be the infinitesimal portion between any two planes that are separated an indefinitely small distance. In the calculus, element is sometimes used as synonymous with differential. | |
noun (n.) Sometimes a curve, or surface, or volume is considered as described by a moving point, or curve, or surface, the latter being at any instant called an element of the former. | |
noun (n.) One of the terms in an algebraic expression. | |
noun (n.) One of the necessary data or values upon which a system of calculations depends, or general conclusions are based; as, the elements of a planet's orbit. | |
noun (n.) The simplest or fundamental principles of any system in philosophy, science, or art; rudiments; as, the elements of geometry, or of music. | |
noun (n.) Any outline or sketch, regarded as containing the fundamental ideas or features of the thing in question; as, the elements of a plan. | |
noun (n.) One of the simple substances, as supposed by the ancient philosophers; one of the imaginary principles of matter. | |
noun (n.) The four elements were, air, earth, water, and fire | |
noun (n.) the conditions and movements of the air. | |
noun (n.) The elements of the alchemists were salt, sulphur, and mercury. | |
noun (n.) The whole material composing the world. | |
noun (n.) The bread and wine used in the eucharist or Lord's supper. | |
verb (v. t.) To compound of elements or first principles. | |
verb (v. t.) To constitute; to make up with elements. |
elemental | adjective (a.) Pertaining to the elements, first principles, and primary ingredients, or to the four supposed elements of the material world; as, elemental air. |
adjective (a.) Pertaining to rudiments or first principles; rudimentary; elementary. |
elementalism | adjective (a.) The theory that the heathen divinities originated in the personification of elemental powers. |
elementality | noun (n.) The condition of being composed of elements, or a thing so composed. |
elementar | adjective (a.) Elementary. |
elementariness | noun (n.) The state of being elementary; original simplicity; uncompounded state. |
elementarity | noun (n.) Elementariness. |
elementary | adjective (a.) Having only one principle or constituent part; consisting of a single element; simple; uncompounded; as, an elementary substance. |
adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or treating of, the elements, rudiments, or first principles of anything; initial; rudimental; introductory; as, an elementary treatise. | |
adjective (a.) Pertaining to one of the four elements, air, water, earth, fire. |
elementation | noun (n.) Instruction in the elements or first principles. |
elementoid | adjective (a.) Resembling an element. |
elemi | noun (n.) A fragrant gum resin obtained chiefly from tropical trees of the genera Amyris and Canarium. A. elemifera yields Mexican elemi; C. commune, the Manila elemi. It is used in the manufacture of varnishes, also in ointments and plasters. |