SIMEON
First name SIMEON's origin is English. SIMEON means "variant of simon meaning hear: listen". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with SIMEON below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of simeon.(Brown names are of the same origin (English) with SIMEON and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming SIMEON
FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES SİMEON AS A WHOLE:
NAMES RHYMING WITH SİMEON (According to last letters):
Rhyming Names According to Last 5 Letters (imeon) - Names That Ends with imeon:
Rhyming Names According to Last 4 Letters (meon) - Names That Ends with meon:
dameon symeonRhyming Names According to Last 3 Letters (eon) - Names That Ends with eon:
acteon alcmaeon creon cleon daveon dayveon deveon gideon jamarreon keon keveon napoleon taveon theon traveon gedeon actaeon leon teon caerleon deonRhyming Names According to Last 2 Letters (on) - Names That Ends with on:
afton carnation aedon solon strephon sidon cihuaton nijlon sokanon odion sion accalon dudon hebron pendragon antton erromon gotzon txanton zorion celyddon eburacon mabon bendision alston alton benton burton carelton fenton hamilton harrison histion kenton pierson preston ralston rawson remington rexton sexton stanton weston aymon ganelon vernon glendon lon anton acheron aeson agamemnon amphion amphitryon andraemon arion bellerophon biton cadmon cenon cercyon charon chiron corydon daemon demogorgon demophon deucalion echion endymion erysichthon euryton geryon haemon hyperion iasion iasonNAMES RHYMING WITH SİMEON (According to first letters):
Rhyming Names According to First 5 Letters (simeo) - Names That Begins with simeo:
Rhyming Names According to First 4 Letters (sime) - Names That Begins with sime:
simenRhyming Names According to First 3 Letters (sim) - Names That Begins with sim:
sim sima siman simao simba simcha simon simona simone simpson simson simuRhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (si) - Names That Begins with si:
siann siannan siany sib sibeal sibley sibyl sibyla sibylla sicheii sid siddael siddalee siddell sidell sidney sidonia sidonie sidra sidwell siegfried siena sienna sierra sifiye sig sigebert sigehere sigenert sigf sigfreda sigfreid sigfrid sigfrieda sigfriede sighle sigifrid sigifrith sigilwig sigiwald sigmund sigrid sigune sigwal sigwald sigwalt siham sihr sihtric sihu sik'is sike sikyahonaw sikyatavo silana silas sile sileas silis silny silsby silver silverio silvester silvestre silvia silvino silviu sin sinai sinclair sinclaire sine sinead sineidin sinh sinjin sinley sinobia sinon sinopa sinovia siobhan siodhachan siolat siomon sipporaNAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH SİMEON:
First Names which starts with 'si' and ends with 'on':
First Names which starts with 's' and ends with 'n':
sachin safin safwan sahran salamon salhtun salman salomon salton samman sampson samson sanborn sanderson sandon sanson santon saran sarpedon sasson saturnin saunderson sawsan saxan saxon scanlan scanlon scannalan scelftun scotlyn scrydan seadon sean seanachan seanan seaton sebasten sebastian sebastien sebastyn sebestyen seeton sefton sein seireadan selden seldon selvyn selwin selwyn sen senen senon seosaimhin seosaimhthin seppanen serafin serban seren seton severin severn sevin sevrin sextein shaaban shaan shaelynn shaheen shain shan shanahan shandon shann shannen shannon sharaden sharon shauden shaughn shaun shawn shawnn shayan shaylon shaylynn shayten shealyn sheehan shelden sheldon shelton sherbourn sheridan sherman shermon sheron sherwin sherwyn shiannEnglish Words Rhyming SIMEON
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES SİMEON AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH SİMEON (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (imeon) - English Words That Ends with imeon:
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (meon) - English Words That Ends with meon:
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (eon) - English Words That Ends with eon:
aeon | noun (n.) A period of immeasurable duration; also, an emanation of the Deity. See Eon. |
noun (n.) An immeasurable or infinite space of time; eternity; a long space of time; an age. | |
noun (n.) One of the embodiments of the divine attributes of the Eternal Being. |
badigeon | noun (n.) A cement or paste (as of plaster and freestone, or of sawdust and glue or lime) used by sculptors, builders, and workers in wood or stone, to fill holes, cover defects, or finish a surface. |
noun (n.) A cement or distemper paste (as of plaster and powdered freestone, or of sawdust and glue or lime) used by sculptors, builders, and workers in wood or stone, to fill holes, cover defects, etc. |
bludgeon | noun (n.) A short stick, with one end loaded, or thicker and heavier that the other, used as an offensive weapon. |
cameleon | noun (n.) See Chaceleon. |
chameleon | noun (n.) A lizardlike reptile of the genus Chamaeleo, of several species, found in Africa, Asia, and Europe. The skin is covered with fine granulations; the tail is prehensile, and the body is much compressed laterally, giving it a high back. |
chirurgeon | noun (n.) A surgeon. |
clergeon | noun (n.) A chorister boy. |
curmudgeon | noun (n.) An avaricious, grasping fellow; a miser; a niggard; a churl. |
dudgeon | noun (n.) The root of the box tree, of which hafts for daggers were made. |
noun (n.) The haft of a dagger. | |
noun (n.) A dudgeon-hafted dagger; a dagger. | |
noun (n.) Resentment; ill will; anger; displeasure. | |
adjective (a.) Homely; rude; coarse. |
dungeon | noun (n.) A close, dark prison, common/, under ground, as if the lower apartments of the donjon or keep of a castle, these being used as prisons. |
verb (v. t.) To shut up in a dungeon. |
eon | noun (n.) Alt. of Aeon |
escocheon | noun (n.) Escutcheon. |
escutcheon | noun (n.) The surface, usually a shield, upon which bearings are marshaled and displayed. The surface of the escutcheon is called the field, the upper part is called the chief, and the lower part the base (see Chiff, and Field.). That side of the escutcheon which is on the right hand of the knight who bears the shield on his arm is called dexter, and the other side sinister. |
noun (n.) A marking upon the back of a cow's udder and the space above it (the perineum), formed by the hair growing upward or outward instead of downward. It is esteemed an index of milking qualities. | |
noun (n.) That part of a vessel's stern on which her name is written. | |
noun (n.) A thin metal plate or shield to protect wood, or for ornament, as the shield around a keyhole. | |
noun (n.) The depression behind the beak of certain bivalves; the ligamental area. |
galleon | noun (n.) A sailing vessel of the 15th and following centuries, often having three or four decks, and used for war or commerce. The term is often rather indiscriminately applied to any large sailing vessel. |
goodgeon | noun (n.) Same as Gudgeon, 5. |
gudgeon | noun (n.) A small European freshwater fish (Gobio fluviatilis), allied to the carp. It is easily caught and often used for food and for bait. In America the killifishes or minnows are often called gudgeons. |
noun (n.) What may be got without skill or merit. | |
noun (n.) A person easily duped or cheated. | |
noun (n.) The pin of iron fastened in the end of a wooden shaft or axle, on which it turns; formerly, any journal, or pivot, or bearing, as the pintle and eye of a hinge, but esp. the end journal of a horizontal. | |
noun (n.) A metal eye or socket attached to the sternpost to receive the pintle of the rudder. | |
verb (v. t.) To deprive fraudulently; to cheat; to dupe; to impose upon. |
gyropigeon | noun (n.) A flying object simulating a pigeon in flight, when projected from a spring trap. It is used as a flying target in shooting matches. |
habergeon | noun (n.) Properly, a short hauberk, but often used loosely for the hauberk. |
haubergeon | noun (n.) See Habergeon. |
inescutcheon | noun (n.) A small escutcheon borne within a shield. |
leon | noun (n.) A lion. |
letheon | noun (n.) Sulphuric ether used as an anaesthetic agent. |
lophosteon | noun (n.) The central keel-bearing part of the sternum in birds. |
luncheon | noun (n.) A lump of food. |
noun (n.) A portion of food taken at any time except at a regular meal; an informal or light repast, as between breakfast and dinner. | |
verb (v. i.) To take luncheon. |
magdaleon | noun (n.) A medicine in the form of a roll, a esp. a roll of plaster. |
malacosteon | noun (n.) A peculiar disease of the bones, in consequence of which they become softened and capable of being bent without breaking. |
melodeon | noun (n.) A kind of small reed organ; -- a portable form of the seraphine. |
noun (n.) A music hall. |
metosteon | noun (n.) The postero-lateral ossification in the sternum of birds; also, the part resulting from such ossification. |
mezereon | noun (n.) A small European shrub (Daphne Mezereum), whose acrid bark is used in medicine. |
melungeon | noun (n.) One of a mixed white and Indian people living in parts of Tennessee and the Carolinas. They are descendants of early intermixtures of white settlers with natives. In North Carolina the Croatan Indians, regarded as descended from Raleigh's lost colony of Croatan, formerly classed with negroes, are now legally recognized as distinct. |
napoleon | noun (n.) A French gold coin of twenty francs, or about $3.86. |
noun (n.) A game in which each player holds five cards, the eldest hand stating the number of tricks he will bid to take, any subsequent player having the right to overbid him or a previous bidder, the highest bidder naming the trump and winning a number of points equal to his bid if he makes so many tricks, or losing the same number of points if he fails to make them. | |
noun (n.) A bid to take five tricks at napoleon. It is ordinarily the highest bid; but sometimes bids are allowed of wellington, or of blucher, to take five tricks, or pay double, or treble, if unsuccessful. | |
noun (n.) A Napoleon gun. | |
noun (n.) A kind of top boot of the middle of the 19th century. | |
noun (n.) A shape and size of cigar. It is about seven inches long. |
nickelodeon | noun (n.) A place of entertainment, as for moving picture exhibition, charging a fee or admission price of five cents. |
odeon | noun (n.) A kind of theater in ancient Greece, smaller than the dramatic theater and roofed over, in which poets and musicians submitted their works to the approval of the public, and contended for prizes; -- hence, in modern usage, the name of a hall for musical or dramatic performances. |
paeon | noun (n.) A foot of four syllables, one long and three short, admitting of four combinations, according to the place of the long syllable. |
pantheon | noun (n.) A temple dedicated to all the gods; especially, the building so called at Rome. |
noun (n.) The collective gods of a people, or a work treating of them; as, a divinity of the Greek pantheon. |
peon | noun (n.) See Poon. |
noun (n.) A foot soldier; a policeman; also, an office attendant; a messenger. | |
noun (n.) A day laborer; a servant; especially, in some of the Spanish American countries, debtor held by his creditor in a form of qualified servitude, to work out a debt. | |
noun (n.) See 2d Pawn. |
pheon | noun (n.) A bearing representing the head of a dart or javelin, with long barbs which are engrailed on the inner edge. |
pigeon | noun (n.) Any bird of the order Columbae, of which numerous species occur in nearly all parts of the world. |
noun (n.) An unsuspected victim of sharpers; a gull. | |
verb (v. t.) To pluck; to fleece; to swindle by tricks in gambling. |
pigwidgeon | noun (n.) A cant word for anything petty or small. It is used by Drayton as the name of a fairy. |
pleurosteon | noun (n.) The antero-lateral piece which articulates the sternum of birds. |
pompoleon | noun (n.) See Pompelmous. |
puncheon | noun (n.) A figured stamp, die, or punch, used by goldsmiths, cutlers, etc. |
noun (n.) A short, upright piece of timber in framing; a short post; an intermediate stud. | |
noun (n.) A split log or heavy slab with the face smoothed; as, a floor made of puncheons. | |
noun (n.) A cask containing, sometimes 84, sometimes 120, gallons. |
sconcheon | noun (n.) A squinch. |
scutcheon | noun (n.) An escutcheon; an emblazoned shield. |
noun (n.) A small plate of metal, as the shield around a keyhole. See Escutcheon, 4. |
sturgeon | noun (n.) Any one of numerous species of large cartilaginous ganoid fishes belonging to Acipenser and allied genera of the family Acipenseridae. They run up rivers to spawn, and are common on the coasts and in the large rivers and lakes of North America, Europe, and Asia. Caviare is prepared from the roe, and isinglass from the air bladder. |
surgeon | noun (n.) One whose profession or occupation is to cure diseases or injuries of the body by manual operation; one whose occupation is to cure local injuries or disorders (such as wounds, dislocations, tumors, etc.), whether by manual operation, or by medication and constitutional treatment. |
noun (n.) Any one of numerous species of chaetodont fishes of the family Teuthidae, or Acanthuridae, which have one or two sharp lancelike spines on each side of the base of the tail. Called also surgeon fish, doctor fish, lancet fish, and sea surgeon. |
tampeon | noun (n.) See Tampion. |
truncheon | noun (n.) A short staff, a club; a cudgel; a shaft of a spear. |
noun (n.) A baton, or military staff of command. | |
noun (n.) A stout stem, as of a tree, with the branches lopped off, to produce rapid growth. | |
verb (v. t.) To beat with a truncheon. |
urosteon | noun (n.) A median ossification back of the lophosteon in the sternum of some birds. |
widgeon | noun (n.) Any one of several species of fresh-water ducks, especially those belonging to the subgenus Mareca, of the genus Anas. The common European widgeon (Anas penelope) and the American widgeon (A. Americana) are the most important species. The latter is called also baldhead, baldpate, baldface, baldcrown, smoking duck, wheat, duck, and whitebelly. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH SİMEON (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (simeo) - Words That Begins with simeo:
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (sime) - Words That Begins with sime:
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (sim) - Words That Begins with sim:
sima | noun (n.) A cyma. |
simagre | noun (n.) A grimace. |
simar | noun (n.) A woman's long dress or robe; also light covering; a scarf. |
simblot | noun (n.) The harness of a drawloom. |
simia | noun (n.) A Linnaean genus of Quadrumana which included the types of numerous modern genera. By modern writers it is usually restricted to the genus which includes the orang-outang. |
simial | adjective (a.) Simian; apelike. |
simian | noun (n.) Any Old World monkey or ape. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the family Simiadae, which, in its widest sense, includes all the Old World apes and monkeys; also, apelike. |
similar | noun (n.) That which is similar to, or resembles, something else, as in quality, form, etc. |
adjective (a.) Exactly corresponding; resembling in all respects; precisely like. | |
adjective (a.) Nearly corresponding; resembling in many respects; somewhat like; having a general likeness. | |
adjective (a.) Homogenous; uniform. |
similarity | noun (n.) The quality or state of being similar; likeness; resemblance; as, a similarity of features. |
similary | adjective (a.) Similar. |
similative | adjective (a.) Implying or indicating likeness or resemblance. |
simile | noun (n.) A word or phrase by which anything is likened, in one or more of its aspects, to something else; a similitude; a poetical or imaginative comparison. |
similiter | noun (n.) The technical name of the form by which either party, in pleading, accepts the issue tendered by his opponent; -- called sometimes a joinder in issue. |
similitude | noun (n.) The quality or state of being similar or like; resemblance; likeness; similarity; as, similitude of substance. |
noun (n.) The act of likening, or that which likens, one thing to another; fanciful or imaginative comparison; a simile. | |
noun (n.) That which is like or similar; a representation, semblance, or copy; a facsimile. |
similitudinary | adjective (a.) Involving or expressing similitude. |
similor | noun (n.) An alloy of copper and zinc, resembling brass, but of a golden color. |
simitar | noun (n.) See Scimiter. |
simmering | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Simmer |
simnel | noun (n.) A kind of cake made of fine flour; a cracknel. |
noun (n.) A kind of rich plum cake, eaten especially on Mid-Lent Sunday. |
simoniac | noun (n.) One who practices simony, or who buys or sells preferment in the church. |
simoniacal | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to simony; guilty of simony; consisting of simony. |
simonial | adjective (a.) Simoniacal. |
simonian | noun (n.) One of the followers of Simon Magus; also, an adherent of certain heretical sects in the early Christian church. |
simonious | adjective (a.) Simoniacal. |
simonist | noun (n.) One who practices simony. |
simony | noun (n.) The crime of buying or selling ecclesiastical preferment; the corrupt presentation of any one to an ecclesiastical benefice for money or reward. |
simoom | noun (n.) Alt. of Simoon |
simoon | noun (n.) A hot, dry, suffocating, dust-laden wind, that blows occasionally in Arabia, Syria, and neighboring countries, generated by the extreme heat of the parched deserts or sandy plains. |
simous | adjective (a.) Having a very flat or snub nose, with the end turned up. |
simpai | noun (n.) A long-tailed monkey (Semnopitchecus melalophus) native of Sumatra. It has a crest of black hair. The forehead and cheeks are fawn color, the upper parts tawny and red, the under parts white. Called also black-crested monkey, and sinpae. |
simpering | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Simper |
() a. &. n. from Simper, v. |
simper | noun (n.) A constrained, self-conscious smile; an affected, silly smile; a smirk. |
verb (v. i.) To smile in a silly, affected, or conceited manner. | |
verb (v. i.) To glimmer; to twinkle. |
simperer | noun (n.) One who simpers. |
simple | adjective (a.) Single; not complex; not infolded or entangled; uncombined; not compounded; not blended with something else; not complicated; as, a simple substance; a simple idea; a simple sound; a simple machine; a simple problem; simple tasks. |
adjective (a.) Plain; unadorned; as, simple dress. | |
adjective (a.) Mere; not other than; being only. | |
adjective (a.) Not given to artifice, stratagem, or duplicity; undesigning; sincere; true. | |
adjective (a.) Artless in manner; unaffected; unconstrained; natural; inartificial;; straightforward. | |
adjective (a.) Direct; clear; intelligible; not abstruse or enigmatical; as, a simple statement; simple language. | |
adjective (a.) Weak in intellect; not wise or sagacious; of but moderate understanding or attainments; hence, foolish; silly. | |
adjective (a.) Not luxurious; without much variety; plain; as, a simple diet; a simple way of living. | |
adjective (a.) Humble; lowly; undistinguished. | |
adjective (a.) Without subdivisions; entire; as, a simple stem; a simple leaf. | |
adjective (a.) Not capable of being decomposed into anything more simple or ultimate by any means at present known; elementary; thus, atoms are regarded as simple bodies. Cf. Ultimate, a. | |
adjective (a.) Homogenous. | |
adjective (a.) Consisting of a single individual or zooid; as, a simple ascidian; -- opposed to compound. | |
adjective (a.) Something not mixed or compounded. | |
adjective (a.) A medicinal plant; -- so called because each vegetable was supposed to possess its particular virtue, and therefore to constitute a simple remedy. | |
adjective (a.) A drawloom. | |
adjective (a.) A part of the apparatus for raising the heddles of a drawloom. | |
adjective (a.) A feast which is not a double or a semidouble. | |
verb (v. i.) To gather simples, or medicinal plants. |
simpleness | noun (n.) The quality or state of being simple; simplicity. |
simpler | noun (n.) One who collects simples, or medicinal plants; a herbalist; a simplist. |
simpless | noun (n.) Simplicity; silliness. |
simpleton | noun (n.) A person of weak intellect; a silly person. |
simplician | noun (n.) One who is simple. |
simplicity | noun (n.) The quality or state of being simple, unmixed, or uncompounded; as, the simplicity of metals or of earths. |
noun (n.) The quality or state of being not complex, or of consisting of few parts; as, the simplicity of a machine. | |
noun (n.) Artlessness of mind; freedom from cunning or duplicity; lack of acuteness and sagacity. | |
noun (n.) Freedom from artificial ornament, pretentious style, or luxury; plainness; as, simplicity of dress, of style, or of language; simplicity of diet; simplicity of life. | |
noun (n.) Freedom from subtlety or abstruseness; clearness; as, the simplicity of a doctrine; the simplicity of an explanation or a demonstration. | |
noun (n.) Weakness of intellect; silliness; folly. |
simplification | noun (n.) The act of simplifying. |
simplifying | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Simplify |
simplist | noun (n.) One skilled in simples, or medicinal plants; a simpler. |
simplistic | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to simples, or a simplist. |
simplity | noun (n.) Simplicity. |
simploce | noun (n.) See Symploce. |
simulacher | noun (n.) Alt. of Simulachre |
simulachre | noun (n.) See Simulacrum. |
simulacrum | noun (n.) A likeness; a semblance; a mock appearance; a sham; -- now usually in a derogatory sense. |
simular | noun (n.) One who pretends to be what he is not; one who, or that which, simulates or counterfeits something; a pretender. |
adjective (a.) False; specious; counterfeit. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH SİMEON:
English Words which starts with 'si' and ends with 'on':
sibilation | noun (n.) Utterance with a hissing sound; also, the sound itself; a hiss. |
siccation | noun (n.) The act or process of drying. |
sideration | noun (n.) The state of being siderated, or planet-struck; esp., blast in plants; also, a sudden and apparently causeless stroke of disease, as in apoplexy or paralysis. |
sideroxylon | noun (n.) A genus of tropical sapotaceous trees noted for their very hard wood; ironwood. |
signification | noun (n.) The act of signifying; a making known by signs or other means. |
noun (n.) That which is signified or made known; that meaning which a sign, character, or token is intended to convey; as, the signification of words. |
silicatization | noun (n.) Silicification. |
silicification | noun (n.) Thae act or process of combining or impregnating with silicon or silica; the state of being so combined or impregnated; as, the silicification of wood. |
silicon | noun (n.) A nonmetalic element analogous to carbon. It always occurs combined in nature, and is artificially obtained in the free state, usually as a dark brown amorphous powder, or as a dark crystalline substance with a meetallic luster. Its oxide is silica, or common quartz, and in this form, or as silicates, it is, next to oxygen, the most abundant element of the earth's crust. Silicon is characteristically the element of the mineral kingdom, as carbon is of the organic world. Symbol Si. Atomic weight 28. Called also silicium. |
sillon | noun (n.) A work raised in the middle of a wide ditch, to defend it. |
simulation | noun (n.) The act of simulating, or assuming an appearance which is feigned, or not true; -- distinguished from dissimulation, which disguises or conceals what is true. |
sindon | noun (n.) A wrapper. |
noun (n.) A small rag or pledget introduced into the hole in the cranium made by a trephine. |
singleton | noun (n.) In certain games at cards, as whist, a single card of any suit held at the deal by a player; as, to lead a singleton. |
sinuation | noun (n.) A winding or bending in and out. |
siogoon | noun (n.) See Shogun. |
siphon | noun (n.) A device, consisting of a pipe or tube bent so as to form two branches or legs of unequal length, by which a liquid can be transferred to a lower level, as from one vessel to another, over an intermediate elevation, by the action of the pressure of the atmosphere in forcing the liquid up the shorter branch of the pipe immersed in it, while the continued excess of weight of the liquid in the longer branch (when once filled) causes a continuous flow. The flow takes place only when the discharging extremity of the pipe ia lower than the higher liquid surface, and when no part of the pipe is higher above the surface than the same liquid will rise by atmospheric pressure; that is, about 33 feet for water, and 30 inches for mercury, near the sea level. |
noun (n.) One of the tubes or folds of the mantle border of a bivalve or gastropod mollusk by which water is conducted into the gill cavity. See Illust. under Mya, and Lamellibranchiata. | |
noun (n.) The anterior prolongation of the margin of any gastropod shell for the protection of the soft siphon. | |
noun (n.) The tubular organ through which water is ejected from the gill cavity of a cephaloid. It serves as a locomotive organ, by guiding and confining the jet of water. Called also siphuncle. See Illust. under Loligo, and Dibranchiata. | |
noun (n.) The siphuncle of a cephalopod shell. | |
noun (n.) The sucking proboscis of certain parasitic insects and crustaceans. | |
noun (n.) A sproutlike prolongation in front of the mouth of many gephyreans. | |
noun (n.) A tubular organ connected both with the esophagus and the intestine of certain sea urchins and annelids. | |
noun (n.) A siphon bottle. | |
verb (v. t.) To convey, or draw off, by means of a siphon, as a liquid from one vessel to another at a lower level. |
siredon | noun (n.) The larval form of any salamander while it still has external gills; especially, one of those which, like the axolotl (Amblystoma Mexicanum), sometimes lay eggs while in this larval state, but which under more favorable conditions lose their gills and become normal salamanders. See also Axolotl. |
situation | noun (n.) Manner in which an object is placed; location, esp. as related to something else; position; locality site; as, a house in a pleasant situation. |
noun (n.) Position, as regards the conditions and circumstances of the case. | |
noun (n.) Relative position; circumstances; temporary state or relation at a moment of action which excites interest, as of persons in a dramatic scene. | |
noun (n.) Permanent position or employment; place; office; as, a situation in a store; a situation under government. |