First Names Rhyming ACIMA
English Words Rhyming ACIMA
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES ACİMA AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ACİMA (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (cima) - English Words That Ends with cima:
cima | noun (n.) A kind of molding. See Cyma. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (ima) - English Words That Ends with ima:
anhima | noun (n.) A South American aquatic bird; the horned screamer or kamichi (Palamedea cornuta). See Kamichi. |
antepenultima | noun (n.) The last syllable of a word except two, as -syl- in monosyllable. |
arapaima | noun (n.) A large fresh-water food fish of South America. |
lima | noun (n.) The capital city of Peru, in South America. |
quadragesima | noun (n.) The forty days of fast preceding Easter; Lent. |
| noun (n.) The forty days of fast preceding Easter; Lent. |
quinquagesima | adjective (a.) Fiftieth. |
| adjective (a.) Fiftieth. |
penultima | noun (n.) Same as Penult. |
rima | noun (n.) A narrow and elongated aperture; a cleft; a fissure. |
septuagesima | noun (n.) The third Sunday before Lent; -- so called because it is about seventy days before Easter. |
sexagesima | noun (n.) The second Sunday before Lent; -- so called as being about the sixtieth day before Easter. |
ultima | noun (n.) The last syllable of a word. |
| adjective (a.) Most remote; furthest; final; last. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ACİMA (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (acim) - Words That Begins with acim:
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (aci) - Words That Begins with aci:
acicula | noun (n.) One of the needlelike or bristlelike spines or prickles of some animals and plants; also, a needlelike crystal. |
acicular | adjective (a.) Needle-shaped; slender like a needle or bristle, as some leaves or crystals; also, having sharp points like needless. |
aciculate | adjective (a.) Alt. of Aciculated |
aciculated | adjective (a.) Furnished with aciculae. |
| adjective (a.) Acicular. |
| adjective (a.) Marked with fine irregular streaks as if scratched by a needle. |
aciculiform | adjective (a.) Needle-shaped; acicular. |
aciculite | noun (n.) Needle ore. |
acid | noun (n.) A sour substance. |
| noun (n.) One of a class of compounds, generally but not always distinguished by their sour taste, solubility in water, and reddening of vegetable blue or violet colors. They are also characterized by the power of destroying the distinctive properties of alkalies or bases, combining with them to form salts, at the same time losing their own peculiar properties. They all contain hydrogen, united with a more negative element or radical, either alone, or more generally with oxygen, and take their names from this negative element or radical. Those which contain no oxygen are sometimes called hydracids in distinction from the others which are called oxygen acids or oxacids. |
| adjective (a.) Sour, sharp, or biting to the taste; tart; having the taste of vinegar: as, acid fruits or liquors. Also fig.: Sour-tempered. |
| adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to an acid; as, acid reaction. |
acidic | adjective (a.) Containing a high percentage of silica; -- opposed to basic. |
acidiferous | adjective (a.) Containing or yielding an acid. |
acidifiable | adjective (a.) Capable of being acidified, or converted into an acid. |
acidific | adjective (a.) Producing acidity; converting into an acid. |
acidification | noun (n.) The act or process of acidifying, or changing into an acid. |
acidifier | noun (n.) A simple or compound principle, whose presence is necessary to produce acidity, as oxygen, chlorine, bromine, iodine, etc. |
acidifying | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Acidify |
acidimeter | noun (n.) An instrument for ascertaining the strength of acids. |
acidimetry | noun (n.) The measurement of the strength of acids, especially by a chemical process based on the law of chemical combinations, or the fact that, to produce a complete reaction, a certain definite weight of reagent is required. |
acidity | noun (n.) The quality of being sour; sourness; tartness; sharpness to the taste; as, the acidity of lemon juice. |
acidness | noun (n.) Acidity; sourness. |
acidulating | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Acidulate |
acidulent | adjective (a.) Having an acid quality; sour; acidulous. |
acidulous | adjective (a.) Slightly sour; sub-acid; sourish; as, an acidulous tincture. |
acierage | noun (n.) The process of coating the surface of a metal plate (as a stereotype plate) with steellike iron by means of voltaic electricity; steeling. |
aciform | adjective (a.) Shaped like a needle. |
acinaceous | adjective (a.) Containing seeds or stones of grapes, or grains like them. |
acinaces | noun (n.) A short sword or saber. |
acinaciform | adjective (a.) Scimeter-shaped; as, an acinaciform leaf. |
acinesia | noun (n.) Same as Akinesia. |
acinetae | noun (n. pl.) A group of suctorial Infusoria, which in the adult stage are stationary. See Suctoria. |
acinetiform | adjective (a.) Resembling the Acinetae. |
aciniform | adjective (a.) Having the form of a cluster of grapes; clustered like grapes. |
| adjective (a.) Full of small kernels like a grape. |
acinose | adjective (a.) Alt. of Acinous |
acinous | adjective (a.) Consisting of acini, or minute granular concretions; as, acinose or acinous glands. |
acinus | noun (n.) One of the small grains or drupelets which make up some kinds of fruit, as the blackberry, raspberry, etc. |
| noun (n.) A grapestone. |
| noun (n.) One of the granular masses which constitute a racemose or compound gland, as the pancreas; also, one of the saccular recesses in the lobules of a racemose gland. |
acipenser | noun (n.) A genus of ganoid fishes, including the sturgeons, having the body armed with bony scales, and the mouth on the under side of the head. See Sturgeon. |
aciurgy | noun (n.) Operative surgery. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH ACİMA:
English Words which starts with 'ac' and ends with 'ma':
aceldama | noun (n.) The potter's field, said to have lain south of Jerusalem, purchased with the bribe which Judas took for betraying his Master, and therefore called the field of blood. Fig.: A field of bloodshed. |