First Names Rhyming HECUBA
English Words Rhyming HECUBA
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES HECUBA AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH HECUBA (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (ecuba) - English Words That Ends with ecuba:
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (cuba) - English Words That Ends with cuba:
succuba | noun (n.) A female demon or fiend. See Succubus. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (uba) - English Words That Ends with uba:
carnauba | noun (n.) The Brazilian wax palm. See Wax palm. |
juba | noun (n.) The mane of an animal. |
| noun (n.) A loose panicle, the axis of which falls to pieces, as in certain grasses. |
tuba | noun (n.) An ancient trumpet. |
| noun (n.) A sax-tuba. See Sax-tuba. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH HECUBA (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (hecub) - Words That Begins with hecub:
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (hecu) - Words That Begins with hecu:
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (hec) - Words That Begins with hec:
hecatomb | noun (n.) A sacrifice of a hundred oxen or cattle at the same time; hence, the sacrifice or slaughter of any large number of victims. |
hecatompedon | noun (n.) A name given to the old Parthenon at Athens, because measuring 100 Greek feet, probably in the width across the stylobate. |
hecdecane | noun (n.) A white, semisolid, spermaceti-like hydrocarbon, C16H34, of the paraffin series, found dissolved as an important ingredient of kerosene, and so called because each molecule has sixteen atoms of carbon; -- called also hexadecane. |
heck | noun (n.) The bolt or latch of a door. |
| noun (n.) A rack for cattle to feed at. |
| noun (n.) A door, especially one partly of latticework; -- called also heck door. |
| noun (n.) A latticework contrivance for catching fish. |
| noun (n.) An apparatus for separating the threads of warps into sets, as they are wound upon the reel from the bobbins, in a warping machine. |
| noun (n.) A bend or winding of a stream. |
heckimal | noun (n.) The European blue titmouse (Parus coeruleus). |
heckle | noun (n. & v. t.) Same as Hackle. |
| verb (v. t.) To interrogate, or ply with questions, esp. with severity or antagonism, as a candidate for the ministry. |
hectare | noun (n.) A measure of area, or superficies, containing a hundred ares, or 10,000 square meters, and equivalent to 2.471 acres. |
hectic | noun (n.) Hectic fever. |
| noun (n.) A hectic flush. |
| adjective (a.) Habitual; constitutional; pertaining especially to slow waste of animal tissue, as in consumption; as, a hectic type in disease; a hectic flush. |
| adjective (a.) In a hectic condition; having hectic fever; consumptive; as, a hectic patient. |
hectocotylized | adjective (a.) Changed into a hectocotylus; having a hectocotylis. |
hectocotylus | noun (n.) One of the arms of the male of most kinds of cephalopods, which is specially modified in various ways to effect the fertilization of the eggs. In a special sense, the greatly modified arm of Argonauta and allied genera, which, after receiving the spermatophores, becomes detached from the male, and attaches itself to the female for reproductive purposes. |
hectogram | noun (n.) A measure of weight, containing a hundred grams, or about 3.527 ounces avoirdupois. |
hectogramme | noun (n.) The same as Hectogram. |
hectograph | noun (n.) A contrivance for multiple copying, by means of a surface of gelatin softened with glycerin. |
hectoliter | noun (n.) Alt. of Hectolitre |
hectolitre | noun (n.) A measure of liquids, containing a hundred liters; equal to a tenth of a cubic meter, nearly 26/ gallons of wine measure, or 22.0097 imperial gallons. As a dry measure, it contains ten decaliters, or about 2/ Winchester bushels. |
hectometer | noun (n.) Alt. of Hectometre |
hectometre | noun (n.) A measure of length, equal to a hundred meters. It is equivalent to 328.09 feet. |
hector | noun (n.) A bully; a blustering, turbulent, insolent, fellow; one who vexes or provokes. |
| verb (v. t.) To treat with insolence; to threaten; to bully; hence, to torment by words; to tease; to taunt; to worry or irritate by bullying. |
| verb (v. i.) To play the bully; to bluster; to be turbulent or insolent. |
hectoring | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Hector |
hectorism | noun (n.) The disposition or the practice of a hector; a bullying. |
hectorly | adjective (a.) Resembling a hector; blustering; insolent; taunting. |
hectostere | noun (n.) A measure of solidity, containing one hundred cubic meters, and equivalent to 3531.66 English or 3531.05 United States cubic feet. |
heckerism | noun (n.) The teaching of Isaac Thomas Hecker (1819-88), which interprets Catholicism as promoting human aspirations after liberty and truth, and as the religion best suited to the character and institutions of the American people. |
| noun (n.) Improperly, certain views or principles erroneously ascribed to Father Hecker in a French translation of Elliott's Life of Hecker. They were condemned as "Americanism" by the Pope, in a letter to Cardinal Gibbons, January 22, 1899. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH HECUBA:
English Words which starts with 'he' and ends with 'ba':