Name Report For First Name ORO:
ORO
First name ORO's origin is Spanish. ORO means "gold". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with ORO below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of oro.(Brown names are of the same origin (Spanish) with ORO and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
Rhymes with ORO - Names & Words
First Names Rhyming ORO
FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES ORO AS A WHOLE:
dorothea omorose dorotea coronis deunoro brigliadoro medoro cristoforo goro doro doroteia dorotha dorothee dorothy isadoro isidoro morogh morold teodoro toro victoro dorottya heorot doronNAMES RHYMING WITH ORO (According to last letters):
Rhyming Names According to Last 2 Letters (ro) - Names That Ends with ro:
hero tyro odero zesiro alessandro arturo benjiro ichiro jiro juro keitaro kenjiro kentaro maro mashiro montaro renjiro saburo saniiro shinzaburo shiro tanjiro taro toshiro caro cearo charo itxaro kimbro socorro alejandro camero casimiro cedro cesaro charro cidro ciro cordero curro elazaro faro galtero hiero isidro jairo javiero jethro lazaro lazzaro leandro lisandro lucero matro mauro munro navarro pacorro pedro pietro pirro porfiro primeiro prospero ramiro severo tauro terciero zero alvaroNAMES RHYMING WITH ORO (According to first letters):
Rhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (or) - Names That Begins with or:
ora orabel orabelle orah orahamm oralee orali oralie oram oran orane oratun orbart orbert ord ordalf ordella ordland ordman ordmund ordsone ordwald ordway ordwin ordwine ordwyn orea oreias orelia oren orenda oreste orestes orford orghlaith orguelleuse orham ori oria oriana orianna orick oriel orik orin orino orion oris orithyia orla orlaith orlaithe orlan orland orlando orlee orlege orlena orlene orlin orlina orlondo orman ormazd ormeman ormemund ormod ormond ormund ornah orneet ornet ornetta ornette orpah orpheus orquidea orquidia orran orren orri orrick orrik orrin orsen orson orthros orton ortun ortygia ortzi orva orval orvelle orvil orville orvin orvyn orwald orwelNAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH ORO:
First Names which starts with 'o' and ends with 'o':
odo ohanko ohnicio ojo okello oko oliverio ominotago onaedo othieno otho otoahnacto ottoEnglish Words Rhyming ORO
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES ORO AS A WHOLE:
acanthophorous | adjective (a.) Spine-bearing. |
acrosporous | adjective (a.) Having acrospores. |
actinophorous | adjective (a.) Having straight projecting spines. |
adenophorous | adjective (a.) Producing glands. |
adiaphorous | adjective (a.) Indifferent or neutral. |
adjective (a.) Incapable of doing either harm or good, as some medicines. |
alectoromachy | noun (n.) Cockfighting. |
alectoromancy | noun (n.) See Alectryomancy. |
amorosa | noun (n.) A wanton woman; a courtesan. |
amorosity | noun (n.) The quality of being amorous; lovingness. |
amoroso | noun (n.) A lover; a man enamored. |
adverb (adv.) In a soft, tender, amatory style. |
amorous | adjective (a.) Inclined to love; having a propensity to love, or to sexual enjoyment; loving; fond; affectionate; as, an amorous disposition. |
adjective (a.) Affected with love; in love; enamored; -- usually with of; formerly with on. | |
adjective (a.) Of or relating to, or produced by, love. |
amorousness | noun (n.) The quality of being amorous, or inclined to sexual love; lovingness. |
angiosporous | adjective (a.) Having spores contained in cells or thecae, as in the case of some fungi. |
anomaloflorous | adjective (a.) Having anomalous flowers. |
anthophorous | adjective (a.) Flower bearing; supporting the flower. |
aporosa | noun (n. pl.) A group of corals in which the coral is not porous; -- opposed to Perforata. |
aporose | adjective (a.) Without pores. |
arborous | adjective (a.) Formed by trees. |
astrometeorology | noun (n.) The investigation of the relation between the sun, moon, and stars, and the weather. |
aurivorous | adjective (a.) Gold-devouring. |
baccivorous | adjective (a.) Eating, or subsisting on, berries; as, baccivorous birds. |
biflorous | adjective (a.) Bearing two flowers; two-flowered. |
biforous | adjective (a.) See Biforate. |
borofluoride | noun (n.) A double fluoride of boron and hydrogen, or some other positive element, or radical; -- called also fluoboride, and formerly fluoborate. |
boroglyceride | noun (n.) A compound of boric acid and glycerin, used as an antiseptic. |
boron | noun (n.) A nonmetallic element occurring abundantly in borax. It is reduced with difficulty to the free state, when it can be obtained in several different forms; viz., as a substance of a deep olive color, in a semimetallic form, and in colorless quadratic crystals similar to the diamond in hardness and other properties. It occurs in nature also in boracite, datolite, tourmaline, and some other minerals. Atomic weight 10.9. Symbol B. |
borosilicate | noun (n.) A double salt of boric and silicic acids, as in the natural minerals tourmaline, datolite, etc. |
borough | noun (n.) In England, an incorporated town that is not a city; also, a town that sends members to parliament; in Scotland, a body corporate, consisting of the inhabitants of a certain district, erected by the sovereign, with a certain jurisdiction; in America, an incorporated town or village, as in Pennsylvania and Connecticut. |
noun (n.) The collective body of citizens or inhabitants of a borough; as, the borough voted to lay a tax. | |
noun (n.) An association of men who gave pledges or sureties to the king for the good behavior of each other. | |
noun (n.) The pledge or surety thus given. |
boroughhead | noun (n.) See Headborough. |
boroughholder | noun (n.) A headborough; a borsholder. |
boroughmaster | noun (n.) The mayor, governor, or bailiff of a borough. |
boroughmonger | noun (n.) One who buys or sells the parliamentary seats of boroughs. |
boroughmongering | noun (n.) Alt. of Boroughmongery |
boroughmongery | noun (n.) The practices of a boroughmonger. |
calcivorous | adjective (a.) Eroding, or eating into, limestone. |
callyciflorous | adjective (a.) Having the petals and stamens adnate to the calyx; -- applied to a subclass of dicotyledonous plants in the system of the French botanist Candolle. |
canorous | adjective (a.) Melodious; musical. |
canorousness | noun (n.) The quality of being musical. |
carnivorous | adjective (a.) Eating or feeding on flesh. The term is applied: (a) to animals which naturally seek flesh for food, as the tiger, dog, etc.; (b) to plants which are supposed to absorb animal food; (c) to substances which destroy animal tissue, as caustics. |
cepevorous | adjective (a.) Feeding upon onions. |
chlorocruorin | noun (n.) A green substance, supposed to be the cause of the green color of the blood in some species of worms. |
chlorodyne | noun (n.) A patent anodyne medicine, containing opium, chloroform, Indian hemp, etc. |
chloroform | noun (n.) A colorless volatile liquid, CHCl3, having an ethereal odor and a sweetish taste, formed by treating alcohol with chlorine and an alkali. It is a powerful solvent of wax, resin, etc., and is extensively used to produce anaesthesia in surgical operations; also externally, to alleviate pain. |
verb (v. t.) To treat with chloroform, or to place under its influence. |
chloroforming | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Chloroform |
chloroleucite | noun (n.) Same as Chloroplastid. |
chlorometer | noun (n.) An instrument to test the decoloring or bleaching power of chloride of lime. |
chlorometry | noun (n.) The process of testing the bleaching power of any combination of chlorine. |
chloropal | noun (n.) A massive mineral, greenish in color, and opal-like in appearance. It is essentially a hydrous silicate of iron. |
chloropeptic | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to an acid more generally called pepsin-hydrochloric acid. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ORO (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 2 Letters (ro) - English Words That Ends with ro:
allegro | noun (n.) An allegro movement; a quick, sprightly strain or piece. |
adjective (a.) Brisk, lively. |
aero | noun (n.) An aeroplane, airship, or the like. |
bolero | noun (n.) A Spanish dance, or the lively music which accompanies it. |
noun (n.) A kind of small outer jacket, with or without sleeves, worn by women. |
burro | noun (n.) A donkey. |
banderillero | noun (n.) One who thrusts in the banderillas in bullfighting. |
campanero | noun (n.) The bellbird of South America. See Bellbird. |
cantarro | noun (n.) A weight used in southern Europe and East for heavy articles. It varies in different localities; thus, at Rome it is nearly 75 pounds, in Sardinia nearly 94 pounds, in Cairo it is 95 pounds, in Syria about 503 pounds. |
noun (n.) A liquid measure in Spain, ranging from two and a half to four gallons. |
caparro | noun (n.) A large South American monkey (Lagothrix Humboldtii), with prehensile tail. |
carbonaro | noun (n.) A member of a secret political association in Italy, organized in the early part of the nineteenth centry for the purpose of changing the government into a republic. |
carpintero | noun (n.) A california woodpecker (Melanerpes formicivorus), noted for its habit of inserting acorns in holes which it drills in trees. The acorns become infested by insect larvae, which, when grown, are extracted for food by the bird. |
cavalero | noun (n.) Alt. of Cavaliero |
cavaliero | noun (n.) A cavalier; a gallant; a libertine. |
cero | noun (n.) A large and valuable fish of the Mackerel family, of the genus Scomberomorus. Two species are found in the West Indies and less commonly on the Atlantic coast of the United States, -- the common cero (Scomberomorus caballa), called also kingfish, and spotted, or king, cero (S. regalis). |
chiaroscuro | noun (n.) Alt. of Chiaro-oscuro |
cicero | noun (n.) Pica type; -- so called by French printers. |
cururo | noun (n.) A Chilian burrowing rodent of the genus Spalacopus. |
caballero | noun (n.) A knight or cavalier; hence, a gentleman. |
electro | noun (n.) An electrotype. |
faro | noun (n.) A gambling game at cardds, in whiich all the other players play against the dealer or banker, staking their money upon the order in which the cards will lie and be dealt from the pack. |
figaro | noun (n.) An adroit and unscrupulous intriguer. |
fuero | noun (n.) A code; a charter; a grant of privileges. |
noun (n.) A custom having the force of law. | |
noun (n.) A declaration by a magistrate. | |
noun (n.) A place where justice is administered. | |
noun (n.) The jurisdiction of a tribunal. |
gabbro | noun (n.) A name originally given by the Italians to a kind of serpentine, later to the rock called euphotide, and now generally used for a coarsely crystalline, igneous rock consisting of lamellar pyroxene (diallage) and labradorite, with sometimes chrysolite (olivine gabbro). |
guacharo | noun (n.) A nocturnal bird of South America and Trinidad (Steatornis Caripensis, or S. steatornis); -- called also oilbird. |
gibaro | noun (n.) The offspring of a Spaniard and an Indian; a Spanish-Indian mestizo. |
hero | noun (n.) An illustrious man, supposed to be exalted, after death, to a place among the gods; a demigod, as Hercules. |
noun (n.) A man of distinguished valor or enterprise in danger, or fortitude in suffering; a prominent or central personage in any remarkable action or event; hence, a great or illustrious person. | |
noun (n.) The principal personage in a poem, story, and the like, or the person who has the principal share in the transactions related; as Achilles in the Iliad, Ulysses in the Odyssey, and Aeneas in the Aeneid. |
hydro | noun (n.) A hydro-aeroplane. |
inro | noun (n.) A small closed receptacle or set of receptacles of hard material, as lacquered wood, iron, bronze, or ivory, used by the Japanese to hold medicines, perfumes, and the like, and carried in the girdle. It is usually secured by a silk cord by which the wearer may grasp it, which cord passes through an ornamental button or knob called a netsuke. |
llanero | noun (n.) One of the inhabitants of the llanos of South America. |
maestro | noun (n.) A master in any art, especially in music; a composer. |
montero | noun (n.) An ancient kind of cap worn by horsemen or huntsmen. |
moro | noun (n.) A small abscess or tumor having a resemblance to a mulberry. |
mucro | noun (n.) A minute abrupt point, as of a leaf; any small, sharp point or process, terminating a larger part or organ. |
mero | noun (n.) Any of several large groupers of warm seas, esp. the guasa (Epinephelus guaza), the red grouper (E. morio), the black grouper (E. nigritas), distinguished as Me"ro de lo al"to (/), and a species called also rock hind, distinguished as Me"ro ca*brol"la (/). |
morro | noun (n.) A round hill or point of land; hence, Morro castle, a castle on a hill. |
negro | noun (n.) A black man; especially, one of a race of black or very dark persons who inhabit the greater part of tropical Africa, and are distinguished by crisped or curly hair, flat noses, and thick protruding lips; also, any black person of unmixed African blood, wherever found. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to negroes; black. |
nero | noun (n.) A Roman emperor notorius for debauchery and barbarous cruelty; hence, any profligate and cruel ruler or merciless tyrant. |
numero | noun (n.) Number; -- often abbrev. No. |
pampero | noun (n.) A violent wind from the west or southwest, which sweeps over the pampas of South America and the adjacent seas, often doing great damage. |
paterero | noun (n.) See Pederero. |
pederero | noun (n.) A term formerly applied to a short piece of chambered ordnance. |
peterero | noun (n.) See Pederero. |
pharo | noun (n.) A pharos; a lighthouse. |
noun (n.) See Faro. |
piffero | noun (n.) Alt. of Piffara |
potagro | noun (n.) See Potargo. |
primero | noun (n.) A game at cards, now unknown. |
pro | adjective (a.) A Latin preposition signifying for, before, forth. |
adverb (adv.) For, on, or in behalf of, the affirmative side; -- in contrast with con. |
pyro | noun (n.) Abbreviation of pyrogallic acid. |
pedro | noun (n.) The five of trumps in certain varieties of auction pitch. |
noun (n.) A variety of auction pitch in which the five of trumps counts five. |
ranchero | noun (n.) A herdsman; a peasant employed on a ranch or rancho. |
noun (n.) The owner and occupant of a ranch or rancho. |
sombrero | noun (n.) A kind of broad-brimmed hat, worn in Spain and in Spanish America. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ORO (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 2 Letters (or) - Words That Begins with or:
ora | noun (n.) A money of account among the Anglo-Saxons, valued, in the Domesday Book, at twenty pence sterling. |
(pl. ) of Os |
orabassu | noun (n.) A South American monkey of the genus Callithrix, esp. |
orach | noun (n.) Alt. of Orache |
orache | noun (n.) A genus (Atriplex) of herbs or low shrubs of the Goosefoot family, most of them with a mealy surface. |
oracle | noun (n.) The answer of a god, or some person reputed to be a god, to an inquiry respecting some affair or future event, as the success of an enterprise or battle. |
noun (n.) Hence: The deity who was supposed to give the answer; also, the place where it was given. | |
noun (n.) The communications, revelations, or messages delivered by God to the prophets; also, the entire sacred Scriptures -- usually in the plural. | |
noun (n.) The sanctuary, or Most Holy place in the temple; also, the temple itself. | |
noun (n.) One who communicates a divine command; an angel; a prophet. | |
noun (n.) Any person reputed uncommonly wise; one whose decisions are regarded as of great authority; as, a literary oracle. | |
noun (n.) A wise sentence or decision of great authority. | |
verb (v. i.) To utter oracles. |
oracling | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Oracle |
oracular | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to an oracle; uttering oracles; forecasting the future; as, an oracular tongue. |
adjective (a.) Resembling an oracle in some way, as in solemnity, wisdom, authority, obscurity, ambiguity, dogmatism. |
oraculous | adjective (a.) Oracular; of the nature of an oracle. |
oragious | adjective (a.) Stormy. |
oraison | noun (n.) See Orison. |
oral | adjective (a.) Uttered by the mouth, or in words; spoken, not written; verbal; as, oral traditions; oral testimony; oral law. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the mouth; surrounding or lining the mouth; as, oral cilia or cirri. |
orang | noun (n.) See Orang-outang. |
orange | noun (n.) The fruit of a tree of the genus Citrus (C. Aurantium). It is usually round, and consists of pulpy carpels, commonly ten in number, inclosed in a leathery rind, which is easily separable, and is reddish yellow when ripe. |
noun (n.) The tree that bears oranges; the orange tree. | |
noun (n.) The color of an orange; reddish yellow. | |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to an orange; of the color of an orange; reddish yellow; as, an orange ribbon. |
orangeade | noun (n.) A drink made of orange juice and water, corresponding to lemonade; orange sherbet. |
orangeat | noun (n.) Candied orange peel; also, orangeade. |
orangeism | noun (n.) Attachment to the principles of the society of Orangemen; the tenets or practices of the Orangemen. |
orangeman | noun (n.) One of a secret society, organized in the north of Ireland in 1795, the professed objects of which are the defense of the regning sovereign of Great Britain, the support of the Protestant religion, the maintenance of the laws of the kingdom, etc.; -- so called in honor of William, Prince of Orange, who became William III. of England. |
orangeroot | noun (n.) An American ranunculaceous plant (Hidrastis Canadensis), having a yellow tuberous root; -- also called yellowroot, golden seal, etc. |
orangery | noun (n.) A place for raising oranges; a plantation of orange trees. |
orangetawny | noun (a. & n.) Deep orange-yellow; dark yellow. |
orarian | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to a coast. |
oration | noun (n.) An elaborate discourse, delivered in public, treating an important subject in a formal and dignified manner; especially, a discourse having reference to some special occasion, as a funeral, an anniversary, a celebration, or the like; -- distinguished from an argument in court, a popular harangue, a sermon, a lecture, etc.; as, Webster's oration at Bunker Hill. |
verb (v. i.) To deliver an oration. |
orator | noun (n.) A public speaker; one who delivers an oration; especially, one distinguished for his skill and power as a public speaker; one who is eloquent. |
noun (n.) In equity proceedings, one who prays for relief; a petitioner. | |
noun (n.) A plaintiff, or complainant, in a bill in chancery. | |
noun (n.) An officer who is the voice of the university upon all public occasions, who writes, reads, and records all letters of a public nature, presents, with an appropriate address, those persons on whom honorary degrees are to be conferred, and performs other like duties; -- called also public orator. |
oratorial | adjective (a.) Oratorical. |
oratorian | noun (n.) See Fathers of the Oratory, under Oratory. |
adjective (a.) Oratorical. |
oratorical | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to an orator or to oratory; characterized by oratory; rhetorical; becoming to an orator; as, an oratorical triumph; an oratorical essay. |
oratorio | noun (n.) A more or less dramatic text or poem, founded on some Scripture nerrative, or great divine event, elaborately set to music, in recitative, arias, grand choruses, etc., to be sung with an orchestral accompaniment, but without action, scenery, or costume, although the oratorio grew out of the Mysteries and the Miracle and Passion plays, which were acted. |
noun (n.) Performance or rendering of such a composition. |
oratorious | adjective (a.) Oratorical. |
oratory | noun (n.) A place of orisons, or prayer; especially, a chapel or small room set apart for private devotions. |
noun (n.) The art of an orator; the art of public speaking in an eloquent or effective manner; the exercise of rhetorical skill in oral discourse; eloquence. |
oratress | noun (n.) A woman who makes public addresses. |
oratrix | noun (n.) A woman plaintiff, or complainant, in equity pleading. |
orb | noun (n.) A blank window or panel. |
noun (n.) A spherical body; a globe; especially, one of the celestial spheres; a sun, planet, or star. | |
noun (n.) One of the azure transparent spheres conceived by the ancients to be inclosed one within another, and to carry the heavenly bodies in their revolutions. | |
noun (n.) A circle; esp., a circle, or nearly circular orbit, described by the revolution of a heavenly body; an orbit. | |
noun (n.) A period of time marked off by the revolution of a heavenly body. | |
noun (n.) The eye, as luminous and spherical. | |
noun (n.) A revolving circular body; a wheel. | |
noun (n.) A sphere of action. | |
noun (n.) Same as Mound, a ball or globe. See lst Mound. | |
noun (n.) A body of soldiers drawn up in a circle, as for defense, esp. infantry to repel cavalry. | |
verb (v. t.) To form into an orb or circle. | |
verb (v. t.) To encircle; to surround; to inclose. | |
verb (v. i.) To become round like an orb. |
orbing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Orb |
orbate | adjective (a.) Bereaved; fatherless; childless. |
orbation | noun (n.) The state of being orbate, or deprived of parents or children; privation, in general; bereavement. |
orbed | adjective (a.) Having the form of an orb; round. |
(imp. & p. p.) of Orb |
orbic | adjective (a.) Alt. of Orbical |
orbical | adjective (a.) Spherical; orbicular; orblike; circular. |
orbicle | noun (n.) A small orb, or sphere. |
orbicula | noun (n.) Same as Discina. |
orbicular | adjective (a.) Resembling or having the form of an orb; spherical; circular; orbiculate. |
orbiculate | noun (n.) That which is orbiculate; especially, a solid the vertical section of which is oval, and the horizontal section circular. |
adjective (a.) Alt. of Orbiculated |
orbiculated | adjective (a.) Made, or being, in the form of an orb; having a circular, or nearly circular, or a spheroidal, outline. |
orbiculation | noun (n.) The state or quality of being orbiculate; orbicularness. |
orbit | noun (n.) The path described by a heavenly body in its periodical revolution around another body; as, the orbit of Jupiter, of the earth, of the moon. |
noun (n.) An orb or ball. | |
noun (n.) The cavity or socket of the skull in which the eye and its appendages are situated. | |
noun (n.) The skin which surrounds the eye of a bird. |
orbital | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to an orbit. |
orbitar | adjective (a.) Orbital. |
orbitary | adjective (a.) Situated around the orbit; as, the orbitary feathers of a bird. |
orbitelae | noun (n. pl.) A division of spiders, including those that make geometrical webs, as the garden spider, or Epeira. |
orbitolites | noun (n.) A genus of living Foraminifera, forming broad, thin, circular disks, containing numerous small chambers. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH ORO:
English Words which starts with 'o' and ends with 'o':
obligato | adjective (a.) See Obbligato. |
obolo | noun (n.) A copper coin, used in the Ionian Islands, about one cent in value. |
octavo | noun (n.) A book composed of sheets each of which is folded into eight leaves; hence, indicating more or less definitely a size of book so made; -- usually written 8vo or 8¡. |
adjective (a.) Having eight leaves to a sheet; as, an octavo form, book, leaf, size, etc. |
octodecimo | noun (n.) A book composed of sheets each of which is folded into eighteen leaves; hence; indicating more or less definitely a size of book, whose sheets are so folded; -- usually written 18mo or 18¡, and called eighteenmo. |
adjective (a.) Having eighteen leaves to a sheet; as, an octodecimo form, book, leaf, size, etc. |
oglio | noun (n.) See Olio. |
ojo | noun (n.) A spring, surrounded by rushes or rank grass; an oasis. |
olio | noun (n.) A dish of stewed meat of different kinds. |
noun (n.) A mixture; a medley. | |
noun (n.) A collection of miscellaneous pieces. |
onappo | noun (n.) A nocturnal South American monkey (Callithrix discolor), noted for its agility; -- called also ventriloquist monkey. |
orlo | noun (n.) A wind instrument of music in use among the Spaniards. |
otto | noun (n.) See Attar. |
ouanderoo | noun (n.) The wanderoo. |
outgo | noun (n.) That which goes out, or is paid out; outlay; expenditure; -- the opposite of income. |
verb (v. t.) To go beyond; to exceed in swiftness; to surpass; to outdo. | |
verb (v. t.) To circumvent; to overreach. |
ovolo | noun (n.) A round, convex molding. See Illust. of Column. |