MIKE
First name MIKE's origin is English. MIKE means "abbreviation of michael and micah who is like god". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with MIKE below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of mike.(Brown names are of the same origin (English) with MIKE and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming MIKE
FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES MĘKE AS A WHOLE:
mikele mikella mikelle mikenna mikeya mikeal mikelNAMES RHYMING WITH MĘKE (According to last letters):
Rhyming Names According to Last 3 Letters (ike) - Names That Ends with ike:
nike erssike ferike morenike obike chike frederike lilike pike sike thorndike evike perzsike helike dike ulrike ikeRhyming Names According to Last 2 Letters (ke) - Names That Ends with ke:
federikke anke brooke kandake kanake irenke haloke shermarke vandyke jumoke moke oke peterke mordke annikke asenke elke larke perke viheke blake bourke burke clarke deke drake duke falke harlake hillocke jake locke meinke nyke parke renke rocke rorke rourke sparke tasunke wake thorndyke driske evelake ilke vibeke fiske stoke zeke berkeNAMES RHYMING WITH MĘKE (According to first letters):
Rhyming Names According to First 3 Letters (mik) - Names That Begins with mik:
mika mika'il mikael mikaela mikaia mikala mikayla mikhail mikhaila mikhalis mikhos miki mikil mikio mikkah mikkel mikki mikko mikolas mikolausRhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (mi) - Names That Begins with mi:
mia miakoda micaden micaela micah micaiah mical michael michaela michaele michaelina michaeline michaelyn michal michalin michayla micheal micheala micheil michel michela michele micheline michella michelle michie michiko michio michon mick mickey micole midas mide midori mieko mielikki mieze migina migisi mignon mignonette miguel mihaela mihai mihaly mila milaan milada milagritos milagros milagrosa milan milana milani milap milburn milbyrne milcah mildraed mildread mildred mildri mildrid mildryd miles miley milford miliani milintica milka milla millana millard millen millenny miller millian millicent millicenteNAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH MĘKE:
First Names which starts with 'm' and ends with 'e':
mabelle mable macaire macalpine macauliffe macayle macbride mace macee macfarlane macfie macie mackaylie mackenzie mackinzie mackynsie maclaine maclane macquarrie macrae madale madalene madalyne maddalene maddie maddisynne maddy-rose madelaine madeleine madelene madeline madge madie madntyre madre mae maelee maelwine maerewine maethelwine maetthere maeve mafuane magaere magaskawee magdalene magee maggie magnilde mahpee maibe maible maidie maiele maile maille maiolaine maipe maire maisie maitane maite maitilde makaela-marie makahlie makale makawee makenzie maldue maledysaunte malene malerie malleville mallorie malmuirie malone malvine mamie mandie mane manette manneville mannie manute manville maolmuire maoltuile marce marceline marcelle marchelle mare maree margarethe margawse margerie marguerite mariamne mariane marianneEnglish Words Rhyming MIKE
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES MĘKE AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH MĘKE (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (ike) - English Words That Ends with ike:
airlike | adjective (a.) Resembling air. |
aldermanlike | adjective (a.) Like or suited to an alderman. |
alike | adjective (a.) Having resemblance or similitude; similar; without difference. |
adverb (adv.) In the same manner, form, or degree; in common; equally; as, we are all alike concerned in religion. |
alsike | noun (n.) A species of clover with pinkish or white flowers; Trifolium hybridum. |
arsmetrike | noun (n.) Arithmetic. |
beastlike | adjective (a.) Like a beast. |
bike | noun (n.) A nest of wild bees, wasps, or ants; a swarm. |
birdlike | adjective (a.) Resembling a bird. |
bishoplike | adjective (a.) Resembling a bishop; belonging to a bishop. |
blocklike | adjective (a.) Like a block; stupid. |
brike | noun (n.) A breach; ruin; downfall; peril. |
businesslike | adjective (a.) In the manner of one transacting business wisely and by right methods. |
catlike | adjective (a.) Like a cat; stealthily; noiselessly. |
childlike | adjective (a.) Resembling a child, or that which belongs to children; becoming a child; meek; submissive; dutiful. |
christianlike | adjective (a.) Becoming to a Christian. |
christlike | adjective (a.) Resembling Christ in character, actions, etc. |
churchlike | adjective (a.) Befitting a church or a churchman; becoming to a clergyman. |
clerklike | adjective (a.) Scholarlike. |
clocklike | adjective (a.) Like a clock or like clockwork; mechanical. |
courtlike | adjective (a.) After the manner of a court; elegant; polite; courtly. |
cowlike | adjective (a.) Resembling a cow. |
deathlike | adjective (a.) Resembling death. |
adjective (a.) Deadly. |
dike | noun (n.) A ditch; a channel for water made by digging. |
noun (n.) An embankment to prevent inundations; a levee. | |
noun (n.) A wall of turf or stone. | |
noun (n.) A wall-like mass of mineral matter, usually an intrusion of igneous rocks, filling up rents or fissures in the original strata. | |
verb (v. t.) To surround or protect with a dike or dry bank; to secure with a bank. | |
verb (v. t.) To drain by a dike or ditch. | |
verb (v. i.) To work as a ditcher; to dig. |
dislike | noun (n.) A feeling of positive and usually permanent aversion to something unpleasant, uncongenial, or offensive; disapprobation; repugnance; displeasure; disfavor; -- the opposite of liking or fondness. |
noun (n.) Discord; dissension. | |
verb (v. t.) To regard with dislike or aversion; to disapprove; to disrelish. | |
verb (v. t.) To awaken dislike in; to displease. |
dovelike | adjective (a.) Mild as a dove; gentle; pure and lovable. |
dragonlike | adjective (a.) Like a dragon. |
etter pike | noun (n.) The stingfish, or lesser weever (Tranchinus vipera). |
fairylike | adjective (a.) Resembling a fairy, or what is made or done be fairies; as, fairylike music. |
fanlike | adjective (a.) Resembling a fan; |
adjective (a.) folded up like a fan, as certain leaves; plicate. |
fellowlike | adjective (a.) Like a companion; companionable; on equal terms; sympathetic. |
fiendlike | adjective (a.) Fiendish; diabolical. |
fike | noun (n.) See Fyke. |
finlike | adjective (a.) Resembling a fin. |
finpike | noun (n.) The bichir. See Crossopterygii. |
fishlike | adjective (a.) Like fish; suggestive of fish; having some of the qualities of fish. |
foxlike | adjective (a.) Resembling a fox in his characteristic qualities; cunning; artful; foxy. |
gentlemanlike | adjective (a.) Alt. of Gentlemanly |
ghostlike | adjective (a.) Like a ghost; ghastly. |
glike | noun (n.) A sneer; a flout. |
goatlike | adjective (a.) Like a goat; goatish. |
godlike | adjective (a.) Resembling or befitting a god or God; divine; hence, preeminently good; as, godlike virtue. |
handspike | noun (n.) A bar or lever, generally of wood, used in a windlass or capstan, for heaving anchor, and, in modified forms, for various purposes. |
hearselike | adjective (a.) Suitable to a funeral. |
homelike | adjective (a.) Like a home; comfortable; cheerful; cozy; friendly. |
hornpike | noun (n.) The garfish. |
hike | noun (n.) The act of hiking; a tramp; a march. |
verb (v. t.) To move with a swing, toss, throw, jerk, or the like. | |
verb (v. i.) To hike one's self; specif., to go with exertion or effort; to tramp; to march laboriously. |
infantlike | adjective (a.) Like an infant. |
ladylike | adjective (a.) Like a lady in appearance or manners; well-bred. |
adjective (a.) Becoming or suitable to a lady; as, ladylike manners. | |
adjective (a.) Delicate; tender; feeble; effeminate. |
lamblike | adjective (a.) Like a lamb; gentle; meek; inoffensive. |
lawyerlike | adjective (a.) Alt. of Lawyerly |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH MĘKE (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (mik) - Words That Begins with mik:
mikado | noun (n.) The popular designation of the hereditary sovereign of Japan. |
mikmaks | noun (n.) Same as Micmacs. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH MĘKE:
English Words which starts with 'm' and ends with 'e':
macaque | noun (n.) Any one of several species of short-tailed monkeys of the genus Macacus; as, M. maurus, the moor macaque of the East Indies. |
mace | noun (n.) A money of account in China equal to one tenth of a tael; also, a weight of 57.98 grains. |
noun (n.) A kind of spice; the aril which partly covers nutmegs. See Nutmeg. | |
noun (n.) A heavy staff or club of metal; a spiked club; -- used as weapon in war before the general use of firearms, especially in the Middle Ages, for breaking metal armor. | |
noun (n.) A staff borne by, or carried before, a magistrate as an ensign of his authority. | |
noun (n.) An officer who carries a mace as an emblem of authority. | |
noun (n.) A knobbed mallet used by curriers in dressing leather to make it supple. | |
noun (n.) A rod for playing billiards, having one end suited to resting on the table and pushed with one hand. |
machete | noun (n.) A large heavy knife resembling a broadsword, often two or three feet in length, -- used by the inhabitants of Spanish America as a hatchet to cut their way through thickets, and for various other purposes. |
machine | noun (n.) In general, any combination of bodies so connected that their relative motions are constrained, and by means of which force and motion may be transmitted and modified, as a screw and its nut, or a lever arranged to turn about a fulcrum or a pulley about its pivot, etc.; especially, a construction, more or less complex, consisting of a combination of moving parts, or simple mechanical elements, as wheels, levers, cams, etc., with their supports and connecting framework, calculated to constitute a prime mover, or to receive force and motion from a prime mover or from another machine, and transmit, modify, and apply them to the production of some desired mechanical effect or work, as weaving by a loom, or the excitation of electricity by an electrical machine. |
noun (n.) Any mechanical contrivance, as the wooden horse with which the Greeks entered Troy; a coach; a bicycle. | |
noun (n.) A person who acts mechanically or at will of another. | |
noun (n.) A combination of persons acting together for a common purpose, with the agencies which they use; as, the social machine. | |
noun (n.) A political organization arranged and controlled by one or more leaders for selfish, private or partisan ends. | |
noun (n.) Supernatural agency in a poem, or a superhuman being introduced to perform some exploit. | |
verb (v. t.) To subject to the action of machinery; to effect by aid of machinery; to print with a printing machine. |
mackle | noun (n.) Same Macule. |
verb (v. t. & i.) To blur, or be blurred, in printing, as if there were a double impression. |
macle | noun (n.) Chiastolite; -- so called from the tessellated appearance of a cross section. See Chiastolite. |
noun (n.) A crystal having a similar tessellated appearance. | |
noun (n.) A twin crystal. |
macrodome | noun (n.) A dome parallel to the longer lateral axis of an orthorhombic crystal. See Dome, n., 4. |
macrospore | noun (n.) One of the specially large spores of certain flowerless plants, as Selaginella, etc. |
macrotone | noun (n.) Same as Macron. |
macrozoospore | noun (n.) A large motile spore having four vibratile cilia; -- found in certain green algae. |
maculate | adjective (a.) Marked with spots or maculae; blotched; hence, defiled; impure; as, most maculate thoughts. |
verb (v.) To spot; to stain; to blur. |
maculature | noun (n.) Blotting paper. |
macule | noun (n.) A spot. |
noun (n.) A blur, or an appearance of a double impression, as when the paper slips a little; a mackle. | |
verb (v.) To blur; especially (Print.), to blur or double an impression from type. See Mackle. |
maculose | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to spots upon a surface; spotted; maculate. |
madame | noun (n.) My lady; -- a French title formerly given to ladies of quality; now, in France, given to all married women. |
made | noun (n.) See Mad, n. |
adjective (a.) Artificially produced; pieced together; formed by filling in; as, made ground; a made mast, in distinction from one consisting of a single spar. | |
() imp. & p. p. of Make. | |
(imp. & p. p.) of Make |
madecassee | noun (n.) A native or inhabitant of Madagascar, or Madecassee; the language of the natives of Madagascar. See Malagasy. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to Madagascar or its inhabitants. |
mademoiselle | noun (n.) A French title of courtesy given to a girl or an unmarried lady, equivalent to the English Miss. |
noun (n.) A marine food fish (Sciaena chrysura), of the Southern United States; -- called also yellowtail, and silver perch. |
madge | noun (n.) The barn owl. |
noun (n.) The magpie. |
madhouse | noun (n.) A house where insane persons are confined; an insane asylum; a bedlam. |
madrague | noun (n.) A large fish pound used for the capture of the tunny in the Mediterranean; also applied to the seines used for the same purpose. |
madrepore | noun (n.) Any coral of the genus Madrepora; formerly, often applied to any stony coral. |
madreporite | noun (n.) A fossil coral. |
noun (n.) The madreporic plate of echinoderms. |
maegbote | noun (n.) Alt. of Magbote |
magbote | noun (n.) Compensation for the injury done by slaying a kinsman. |
noun (n.) See Maegbote. |
magazine | noun (n.) A receptacle in which anything is stored, especially military stores, as ammunition, arms, provisions, etc. |
noun (n.) The building or room in which the supply of powder is kept in a fortification or a ship. | |
noun (n.) A chamber in a gun for holding a number of cartridges to be fed automatically to the piece. | |
noun (n.) A pamphlet published periodically containing miscellaneous papers or compositions. | |
noun (n.) A country or district especially rich in natural products. | |
noun (n.) A city viewed as a marketing center. | |
noun (n.) A reservoir or supply chamber for a stove, battery, camera, typesetting machine, or other apparatus. | |
noun (n.) A store, or shop, where goods are kept for sale. | |
verb (v. t.) To store in, or as in, a magazine; to store up for use. |
mage | noun (n.) A magician. |
maggiore | adjective (a.) Greater, in respect to scales, intervals, etc., when used in opposition to minor; major. |
magistrate | noun (n.) A person clothed with power as a public civil officer; a public civil officer invested with the executive government, or some branch of it. |
magistrature | noun (n.) Magistracy. |
magnesite | noun (n.) Native magnesium carbonate occurring in white compact or granular masses, and also in rhombohedral crystals. |
magnetite | noun (n.) An oxide of iron (Fe3O4) occurring in isometric crystals, also massive, of a black color and metallic luster. It is readily attracted by a magnet and sometimes possesses polarity, being then called loadstone. It is an important iron ore. Called also magnetic iron. |
magnetizable | adjective (a.) Capable of magnetized. |
magnetizee | noun (n.) A person subjected to the influence of animal magnetism. |
magnifiable | adjective (a.) Such as can be magnified, or extolled. |
magnificence | noun (n.) The act of doing what magnificent; the state or quality of being magnificent. |
magniloquence | noun (n.) The quality of being magniloquent; pompous discourse; grandiloquence. |
magnitude | noun (n.) Extent of dimensions; size; -- applied to things that have length, breath, and thickness. |
noun (n.) That which has one or more of the three dimensions, length, breadth, and thickness. | |
noun (n.) Anything of which greater or less can be predicated, as time, weight, force, and the like. | |
noun (n.) Greatness; grandeur. | |
noun (n.) Greatness, in reference to influence or effect; importance; as, an affair of magnitude. |
magpie | noun (n.) Any one of numerous species of the genus Pica and related genera, allied to the jays, but having a long graduated tail. |
mahoe | noun (n.) A name given to several malvaceous trees (species of Hibiscus, Ochroma, etc.), and to their strong fibrous inner bark, which is used for strings and cordage. |
mahone | noun (n.) A large Turkish ship. |
maidenlike | adjective (a.) Like a maiden; modest; coy. |
maidpale | adjective (a.) Pale, like a sick girl. |
maigre | adjective (a.) Belonging to a fast day or fast; as, a maigre day. |
mailable | adjective (a.) Admissible lawfully into the mail. |
maine | noun (n.) One of the New England States. |
mainpernable | adjective (a.) Capable of being admitted to give surety by mainpernors; able to be mainprised. |
mainprise | noun (n.) A writ directed to the sheriff, commanding him to take sureties, called mainpernors, for the prisoner's appearance, and to let him go at large. This writ is now obsolete. |
noun (n.) Deliverance of a prisoner on security for his appearance at a day. | |
verb (v. t.) To suffer to go at large, on his finding sureties, or mainpernors, for his appearance at a day; -- said of a prisoner. |
maintainable | adjective (a.) That maybe maintained. |
maintenance | noun (n.) The act of maintaining; sustenance; support; defense; vindication. |
noun (n.) That which maintains or supports; means of sustenance; supply of necessaries and conveniences. | |
noun (n.) An officious or unlawful intermeddling in a cause depending between others, by assisting either party with money or means to carry it on. See Champerty. |
maistre | noun (n.) Alt. of Maistry |
maistrie | noun (n.) Alt. of Maistry |
maize | noun (n.) A large species of American grass of the genus Zea (Z. Mays), widely cultivated as a forage and food plant; Indian corn. Also, its seed, growing on cobs, and used as food for men animals. |
majorate | noun (n.) The office or rank of a major. |
adjective (a.) To augment; to increase. |
majusculae | noun (n. pl.) Capital letters, as found in manuscripts of the sixth century and earlier. |
majuscule | noun (n.) A capital letter; especially, one used in ancient manuscripts. See Majusculae. |
makable | adjective (a.) Capable of being made. |
make | noun (n.) A companion; a mate; often, a husband or a wife. |
noun (n.) Structure, texture, constitution of parts; construction; shape; form. | |
verb (v. t.) To cause to exist; to bring into being; to form; to produce; to frame; to fashion; to create. | |
verb (v. t.) To form of materials; to cause to exist in a certain form; to construct; to fabricate. | |
verb (v. t.) To produce, as something artificial, unnatural, or false; -- often with up; as, to make up a story. | |
verb (v. t.) To bring about; to bring forward; to be the cause or agent of; to effect, do, perform, or execute; -- often used with a noun to form a phrase equivalent to the simple verb that corresponds to such noun; as, to make complaint, for to complain; to make record of, for to record; to make abode, for to abide, etc. | |
verb (v. t.) To execute with the requisite formalities; as, to make a bill, note, will, deed, etc. | |
verb (v. t.) To gain, as the result of one's efforts; to get, as profit; to make acquisition of; to have accrue or happen to one; as, to make a large profit; to make an error; to make a loss; to make money. | |
verb (v. t.) To find, as the result of calculation or computation; to ascertain by enumeration; to find the number or amount of, by reckoning, weighing, measurement, and the like; as, he made the distance of; to travel over; as, the ship makes ten knots an hour; he made the distance in one day. | |
verb (v. t.) To put a desired or desirable condition; to cause to thrive. | |
verb (v. t.) To cause to be or become; to put into a given state verb, or adjective; to constitute; as, to make known; to make public; to make fast. | |
verb (v. t.) To cause to appear to be; to constitute subjectively; to esteem, suppose, or represent. | |
verb (v. t.) To require; to constrain; to compel; to force; to cause; to occasion; -- followed by a noun or pronoun and infinitive. | |
verb (v. t.) To become; to be, or to be capable of being, changed or fashioned into; to do the part or office of; to furnish the material for; as, he will make a good musician; sweet cider makes sour vinegar; wool makes warm clothing. | |
verb (v. t.) To compose, as parts, ingredients, or materials; to constitute; to form; to amount to. | |
verb (v. t.) To be engaged or concerned in. | |
verb (v. t.) To reach; to attain; to arrive at or in sight of. | |
verb (v. i.) To act in a certain manner; to have to do; to manage; to interfere; to be active; -- often in the phrase to meddle or make. | |
verb (v. i.) To proceed; to tend; to move; to go; as, he made toward home; the tiger made at the sportsmen. | |
verb (v. i.) To tend; to contribute; to have effect; -- with for or against; as, it makes for his advantage. | |
verb (v. i.) To increase; to augment; to accrue. | |
verb (v. i.) To compose verses; to write poetry; to versify. |
makebate | noun (n.) One who excites contentions and quarrels. |
malacatune | noun (n.) See Melocoton. |
malachite | noun (n.) Native hydrous carbonate of copper, usually occurring in green mammillary masses with concentric fibrous structure. |
malacolite | noun (n.) A variety of pyroxene. |
malaise | noun (n.) An indefinite feeling of uneasiness, or of being sick or ill at ease. |
malamate | noun (n.) A salt of malamic acid. |
malamethane | noun (n.) A white crystalline substance forming the ethyl salt of malamic acid. |
malamide | noun (n.) The acid amide derived from malic acid, as a white crystalline substance metameric with asparagine. |
malate | noun (n.) A salt of malic acid. |
male | noun (n.) Same as Mail, a bag. |
noun (n.) An animal of the male sex. | |
noun (n.) A plant bearing only staminate flowers. | |
adjective (a.) Evil; wicked; bad. | |
verb (v. t.) Of or pertaining to the sex that begets or procreates young, or (in a wider sense) to the sex that produces spermatozoa, by which the ova are fertilized; not female; as, male organs. | |
verb (v. t.) Capable of producing fertilization, but not of bearing fruit; -- said of stamens and antheridia, and of the plants, or parts of plants, which bear them. | |
verb (v. t.) Suitable to the male sex; characteristic or suggestive of a male; masculine; as, male courage. | |
verb (v. t.) Consisting of males; as, a male choir. | |
verb (v. t.) Adapted for entering another corresponding piece (the female piece) which is hollow and which it fits; as, a male gauge, for gauging the size or shape of a hole; a male screw, etc. |
maleate | noun (n.) A salt of maleic acid. |
malefeasance | noun (n.) See Malfeasance. |
malefice | noun (n.) An evil deed; artifice; enchantment. |
maleficence | noun (n.) Evil doing, esp. to others. |
maleficience | noun (n.) The doing of evil, harm, or mischief. |
malengine | noun (n.) Evil machination; guile; deceit. |
malepractice | noun (n.) See Malpractice. |
malevolence | noun (n.) The quality or state of being malevolent; evil disposition toward another; inclination to injure others; ill will. See Synonym of Malice. |
malfeasance | noun (n.) The doing of an act which a person ought not to do; evil conduct; an illegal deed. |
malice | noun (n.) Enmity of heart; malevolence; ill will; a spirit delighting in harm or misfortune to another; a disposition to injure another; a malignant design of evil. |
noun (n.) Any wicked or mischievous intention of the mind; a depraved inclination to mischief; an intention to vex, annoy, or injure another person, or to do a wrongful act without just cause or cause or excuse; a wanton disregard of the rights or safety of others; willfulness. | |
verb (v. t.) To regard with extreme ill will. |
malignance | noun (n.) Alt. of Malignancy |
malleable | adjective (a.) Capable of being extended or shaped by beating with a hammer, or by the pressure of rollers; -- applied to metals. |
mallemoke | noun (n.) See Mollemoke. |
malonate | adjective (a.) At salt of malonic acid. |
malpractice | noun (n.) Evil practice; illegal or immoral conduct; practice contrary to established rules; specifically, the treatment of a case by a surgeon or physician in a manner which is contrary to accepted rules and productive of unfavorable results. |
maltese | noun (n. sing. & pl.) A native or inhabitant of Malta; the people of Malta. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to Malta or to its inhabitants. |
maltine | noun (n.) The fermentative principle of malt; malt diastase; also, a name given to various medicinal preparations made from or containing malt. |
maltose | noun (n.) A crystalline sugar formed from starch by the action of distance of malt, and the amylolytic ferment of saliva and pancreatic juice. It resembles dextrose, but rotates the plane of polarized light further to the right and possesses a lower cupric oxide reducing power. |
malvesie | noun (n.) Malmsey wine. See Malmsey. |
mamaluke | noun (n.) Same as Mameluke. |
mameluke | noun (n.) One of a body of mounted soldiers recruited from slaves converted to Mohammedanism, who, during several centuries, had more or less control of the government of Egypt, until exterminated or dispersed by Mehemet Ali in 1811. |
mammee | noun (n.) A fruit tree of tropical America, belonging to the genus Mammea (M. Americana); also, its fruit. The latter is large, covered with a thick, tough ring, and contains a bright yellow pulp of a pleasant taste and fragrant scent. It is often called mammee apple. |
mammillate | adjective (a.) Alt. of Mammillated |
mammonite | noun (n.) One devoted to the acquisition of wealth or the service of Mammon. |
mammose | adjective (a.) Having the form of the breast; breast-shaped. |
manable | adjective (a.) Marriageable. |
manace | noun (n. & v.) Same as Menace. |
manacle | noun (n.) A handcuff; a shackle for the hand or wrist; -- usually in the plural. |
verb (v. t.) To put handcuffs or other fastening upon, for confining the hands; to shackle; to confine; to restrain from the use of the limbs or natural powers. |
manage | noun (n.) The handling or government of anything, but esp. of a horse; management; administration. See Manege. |
noun (n.) To have under control and direction; to conduct; to guide; to administer; to treat; to handle. | |
noun (n.) Hence: Esp., to guide by careful or delicate treatment; to wield with address; to make subservient by artful conduct; to bring around cunningly to one's plans. | |
noun (n.) To train in the manege, as a horse; to exercise in graceful or artful action. | |
noun (n.) To treat with care; to husband. | |
noun (n.) To bring about; to contrive. | |
verb (v. i.) To direct affairs; to carry on business or affairs; to administer. |
manageable | adjective (a.) Such as can be managed or used; suffering control; governable; tractable; subservient; as, a manageable horse. |
manatee | noun (n.) Any species of Trichechus, a genus of sirenians; -- called alsosea cow. |
manbote | noun (n.) A sum paid to a lord as a pecuniary compensation for killing his man (that is, his vassal, servant, or tenant). |