First Names Rhyming METURATO
English Words Rhyming METURATO
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES METURATO AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH METURATO (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 7 Letters (eturato) - English Words That Ends with eturato:
Rhyming Words According to Last 6 Letters (turato) - English Words That Ends with turato:
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (urato) - English Words That Ends with urato:
misurato | adjective (a.) Measured; -- a direction to perform a passage in strict or measured time. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (rato) - English Words That Ends with rato:
castrato | noun (n.) A male person castrated for the purpose of improving his voice for singing; an artificial, or male, soprano. |
erato | noun (n.) The Muse who presided over lyric and amatory poetry. |
inamorato | noun (n.) A male lover. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (ato) - English Words That Ends with ato:
agitato | adjective (a.) Sung or played in a restless, hurried, and spasmodic manner. |
araguato | noun (n.) A South American monkey, the ursine howler (Mycetes ursinus). See Howler, n., 2. |
avigato | noun (n.) See Avocado. |
carapato | noun (n.) A south American tick of the genus Amblyomma. There are several species, very troublesome to man and beast. |
fugato | noun (n.) A composition resembling a fugue. |
| adjective (a.) in the gugue style, but not strictly like a fugue. |
legato | adjective (a.) Connected; tied; -- a term used when successive tones are to be produced in a closely connected, smoothly gliding manner. It is often indicated by a tie, thus /, /, or /, /, written over or under the notes to be so performed; -- opposed to staccato. |
marcato | adjective (a.) In a marked emphatic manner; -- used adverbially as a direction. |
nippitato | noun (n.) Strong liquor. |
obligato | adjective (a.) See Obbligato. |
potato | noun (n.) A plant (Solanum tuberosum) of the Nightshade family, and its esculent farinaceous tuber, of which there are numerous varieties used for food. It is native of South America, but a form of the species is found native as far north as New Mexico. |
| noun (n.) The sweet potato (see below). |
rabato | noun (n.) A kind of ruff for the neck; a turned-down collar; a rebato. |
rebato | noun (n.) Same as Rabato. |
rubato | adjective (a.) Robbed; borrowed. |
sforzato | adjective (a.) Forcing or forced; -- a direction placed over a note, to signify that it must be executed with peculiar emphasis and force; -- marked fz (an abbreviation of forzando), sf, sfz, or /. |
sfumato | adjective (a.) Having vague outlines, and colors and shades so mingled as to give a misty appearance; -- said of a painting. |
smorsato | adjective (a.) Growing gradually fainter and softer; dying away; morendo. |
spiccato | adjective (a.) Detached; separated; -- a term indicating that every note is to be performed in a distinct and pointed manner. |
staccato | adjective (a.) Disconnected; separated; distinct; -- a direction to perform the notes of a passage in a short, distinct, and pointed manner. It is opposed to legato, and often indicated by heavy accents written over or under the notes, or by dots when the performance is to be less distinct and emphatic. |
| adjective (a.) Expressed in a brief, pointed manner. |
stiacciato | noun (n.) The lowest relief, -- often used in Italian sculpture of the 15th and 16th centuries. |
tomato | noun (n.) The fruit of a plant of the Nightshade family (Lycopersicum esculentun); also, the plant itself. The fruit, which is called also love apple, is usually of a rounded, flattened form, but often irregular in shape. It is of a bright red or yellow color, and is eaten either cooked or uncooked. |
wappato | noun (n.) See Wapatoo. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH METURATO (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 7 Letters (meturat) - Words That Begins with meturat:
Rhyming Words According to First 6 Letters (metura) - Words That Begins with metura:
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (metur) - Words That Begins with metur:
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (metu) - Words That Begins with metu:
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (met) - Words That Begins with met:
metabasis | noun (n.) A transition from one subject to another. |
| noun (n.) Same as Metabola. |
metabola | noun (n.) Alt. of Metabole |
| noun (n. pl.) Alt. of Metabolia |
metabole | noun (n.) A change or mutation; a change of disease, symptoms, or treatment. |
metabolia | noun (n. pl.) A comprehensive group of insects, including those that undegro a metamorphosis. |
metabolian | noun (n.) An insect which undergoes a metamorphosis. |
metabolic | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to metamorphosis; pertaining to, or involving, change. |
| adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to metabolism; as, metabolic activity; metabolic force. |
metabolisis | noun (n.) Metabolism. |
metabolism | noun (n.) The act or process, by which living tissues or cells take up and convert into their own proper substance the nutritive material brought to them by the blood, or by which they transform their cell protoplasm into simpler substances, which are fitted either for excretion or for some special purpose, as in the manufacture of the digestive ferments. Hence, metabolism may be either constructive (anabolism), or destructive (katabolism). |
| noun (n.) The series of chemical changes which take place in an organism, by means of which food is manufactured and utilized and waste materials are eliminated. |
metabolite | noun (n.) A product of metabolism; a substance produced by metabolic action, as urea. |
metabranchial | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the lobe of the carapace of crabs covering the posterior branchiae. |
metacarpal | noun (n.) A metacarpal bone. |
| adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the metacarpus. |
metacarpus | noun (n.) That part of the skeleton of the hand or forefoot between the carpus and phalanges. In man it consists of five bones. See Illust. of Artiodactyla. |
metacenter | noun (n.) Alt. of -tre |
metacetone | noun (n.) A colorless liquid of an agreeable odor, C6H10O, obtained by distilling a mixture of sugar and lime; -- so called because formerly regarded as a polymeric modification of acetone. |
metachloral | noun (n.) A white, amorphous, insoluble substance regarded as a polymeric variety of chloral. |
metachronism | noun (n.) An error committed in chronology by placing an event after its real time. |
metachrosis | noun (n.) The power og changing color at will by the expansion of special pigment cells, under nerve influence, as seen in many reptiles, fishes, etc. |
metacinnabarite | noun (n.) Sulphide of mercury in isometric form and black in color. |
metacism | noun (n.) A defect in pronouncing the letter m, or a too frequent use of it. |
metacrolein | noun (n.) A polymeric modification of acrolein obtained by heating it with caustic potash. It is a crystalline substance having an aromatic odor. |
metacromion | noun (n.) A process projecting backward and downward from the acromion of the scapula of some mammals. |
metadiscoidal | adjective (a.) Discoidal by derivation; -- applied especially to the placenta of man and apes, because it is supposed to have been derived from a diffused placenta. |
metagastric | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the two posterior gastric lobes of the carapace of crabs. |
metagenesis | noun (n.) The change of form which one animal species undergoes in a series of successively produced individuals, extending from the one developed from the ovum to the final perfected individual. Hence, metagenesis involves the production of sexual individuals by nonsexual means, either directly or through intervening sexless generations. Opposed to monogenesis. See Alternate generation, under Generation. |
| noun (n.) Alternation of sexual and asexual or gemmiparous generations; -- in distinction from heterogamy. |
metagenetic | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to metagenesis. |
metagenic | adjective (a.) Metagenetic. |
metagnathous | adjective (a.) Cross-billed; -- said of certain birds, as the crossbill. |
metagrammatism | noun (n.) Anagrammatism. |
metagraphic | adjective (a.) By or pertaining to metagraphy. |
metagraphy | noun (n.) The art or act of rendering the letters of the alphabet of one language into the possible equivalents of another; transliteration. |
metal | noun (n.) An elementary substance, as sodium, calcium, or copper, whose oxide or hydroxide has basic rather than acid properties, as contrasted with the nonmetals, or metalloids. No sharp line can be drawn between the metals and nonmetals, and certain elements partake of both acid and basic qualities, as chromium, manganese, bismuth, etc. |
| noun (n.) Ore from which a metal is derived; -- so called by miners. |
| noun (n.) A mine from which ores are taken. |
| noun (n.) The substance of which anything is made; material; hence, constitutional disposition; character; temper. |
| noun (n.) Courage; spirit; mettle. See Mettle. |
| noun (n.) The broken stone used in macadamizing roads and ballasting railroads. |
| noun (n.) The effective power or caliber of guns carried by a vessel of war. |
| noun (n.) Glass in a state of fusion. |
| noun (n.) The rails of a railroad. |
| verb (v. t.) To cover with metal; as, to metal a ship's bottom; to metal a road. |
metaling | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Metal |
metalammonium | noun (n.) A hypothetical radical derived from ammonium by the substitution of metallic atoms in place of hydrogen. |
metalbumin | noun (n.) A form of albumin found in ascitic and certain serous fluids. It is sometimes regarded as a mixture of albumin and mucin. |
metaldehyde | noun (n.) A white crystalline substance isomeric with, and obtained from, acetic aldehyde by polymerization, and reconvertible into the same. |
metalepsis | noun (n.) The continuation of a trope in one word through a succession of significations, or the union of two or more tropes of a different kind in one word. |
metalepsy | noun (n.) Exchange; replacement; substitution; metathesis. |
metaleptic | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to a metalepsis. |
| adjective (a.) Transverse; as, the metaleptic motion of a muscle. |
| adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, concerned in, or occurring by, metalepsy. |
metaleptical | adjective (a.) Metaleptic. |
metallic | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to a metal; of the nature of metal; resembling metal; as, a metallic appearance; a metallic alloy. |
| adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or characterized by, the essential and implied properties of a metal, as contrasted with a nonmetal or metalloid; basic; antacid; positive. |
metallical | adjective (a.) See Metallic. |
metallifacture | noun (n.) The production and working or manufacture of metals. |
metalliferous | adjective (a.) Producing metals; yielding metals. |
metalliform | adjective (a.) Having the form or structure of a metal. |
metalline | noun (n.) A substance of variable composition, but resembling a soft, dark-colored metal, used in the bearings of machines for obviating friction, and as a substitute for lubricants. |
| adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or resembling, a metal; metallic; as, metalline properties. |
| adjective (a.) Impregnated with metallic salts; chalybeate; as, metalline water. |
metallist | noun (n.) A worker in metals, or one skilled in metals. |
metallization | noun (n.) The act or process of metallizing. |
metallizing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Metallize |
metallochrome | noun (n.) A coloring produced by the deposition of some metallic compound; specifically, the prismatic tints produced by depositing a film of peroxide of lead on polished steel by electricity. |
metallochromy | noun (n.) The art or process of coloring metals. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH METURATO:
English Words which starts with 'met' and ends with 'ato':
English Words which starts with 'me' and ends with 'to':
memento | noun (n.) A hint, suggestion, token, or memorial, to awaken memory; that which reminds or recalls to memory; a souvenir. |
mezzotinto | noun (n.) Mezzotint. |
| verb (v. t.) To engrave in mezzotint; to represent by mezzotint. |