TAIT
First name TAIT's origin is English. TAIT means "cheerful". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with TAIT below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of tait.(Brown names are of the same origin (English) with TAIT and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming TAIT
FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES TAİT AS A WHOLE:
taitasi taite taithleachNAMES RHYMING WITH TAİT (According to last letters):
Rhyming Names According to Last 3 Letters (ait) - Names That Ends with ait:
ciatlllait damhnait fianait gobnait muadhnait obharnait ranait rathnait searlait chait wait odharnait cait parfaitRhyming Names According to Last 2 Letters (it) - Names That Ends with it:
selamawit marit nit uadjit uatchit lirit hurit margrit dawit abdul-basit kantit langit wit ini-herit thabit kermit hipolit ranit birgit brit danit delit derorit dorit edit enit gilit ilanit jafit judit karmelit karmit mirit morit navit nurit onit schlomit shulamit vadit vardit yaffit yuhudit zehavit cleit eluwilussit gerrit jaskirit kit manfrit ronit pit smit laurit yehudit urit pazit nirit gurit gazit ganit galit dalit avivit alumit ceit gwynit berit johfrit kalanit naamit zayit margitNAMES RHYMING WITH TAİT (According to first letters):
Rhyming Names According to First 3 Letters (tai) - Names That Begins with tai:
tai taicligh taidgh taidhg taidhgin taigi tailayag taillefe taillefer taini taipa taishi taiyanaRhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (ta) - Names That Begins with ta:
taavet taaveti taavetti taavi tab taban tabari tabatha tabbart tabbert taber tabetha tabia tabitha tablita tabor tabora taburer tacy tad tadao tadd tadeo tadesuz tadewi tadhg tadita tadleigh tafui tag tagan tage taggart tahbert taher tahir tahirah tahkeome tahki tahlia tahmelapachme tahnee tahra tahu tahurer taj tajah taji tajo taka takala takara takchawee takeo takhi takis takiyah takoda takouhi tal tala talal talawat talayeh talbert talbot talbott tale taleb talebot talehot talei taletha talford talia taliah talib talibah taliesin talihah talisha talitha tallia tallis tallon tally talmadgeNAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH TAİT:
First Names which starts with 't' and ends with 't':
tamirat tauret tayt tefnut tempest tibalt tibault tibbot tiebout tihalt toft torht toussaint toussnint trent trevrizent truett tuyet tybalt tynetEnglish Words Rhyming TAIT
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES TAİT AS A WHOLE:
staith | noun (n.) A landing place; an elevated staging upon a wharf for discharging coal, etc., as from railway cars, into vessels. |
staithman | noun (n.) A man employed in weighing and shipping at a staith. |
tait | noun (n.) A small nocturnal and arboreal Australian marsupial (Tarsipes rostratus) about the size of a mouse. It has a long muzzle, a long tongue, and very few teeth, and feeds upon honey and insects. Called also noolbenger. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH TAİT (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (ait) - English Words That Ends with ait:
ait | noun (n.) An islet, or little isle, in a river or lake; an eyot. |
noun (n.) Oat. |
await | noun (n.) A waiting for; ambush; watch; watching; heed. |
verb (v. t.) To watch for; to look out for. | |
verb (v. t.) To wait on, serve, or attend. | |
verb (v. t.) To wait for; to stay for; to expect. See Expect. | |
verb (v. t.) To be in store for; to be ready or in waiting for; as, a glorious reward awaits the good. | |
verb (v. i.) To watch. | |
verb (v. i.) To wait (on or upon). | |
verb (v. i.) To wait; to stay in waiting. |
brait | noun (n.) A rough diamond. |
cadbait | noun (n.) See Caddice. |
distrait | adjective (a.) Absent-minded; lost in thought; abstracted. |
gait | noun (n.) A going; a walk; a march; a way. |
noun (n.) Manner of walking or stepping; bearing or carriage while moving. |
krait | noun (n.) A very venomous snake of India (Bungarus coeruleus), allied to the cobra. Its upper parts are bluish or brownish black, often with narrow white streaks; the belly is whitish. |
plait | noun (n.) A flat fold; a doubling, as of cloth; a pleat; as, a box plait. |
noun (n.) A braid, as of hair or straw; a plat. | |
verb (v. t.) To fold; to double in narrow folds; to pleat; as, to plait a ruffle. | |
verb (v. t.) To interweave the strands or locks of; to braid; to plat; as, to plait hair; to plait rope. |
portrait | noun (n.) The likeness of a person, painted, drawn, or engraved; commonly, a representation of the human face painted from real life. |
noun (n.) Hence, any graphic or vivid delineation or description of a person; as, a portrait in words. | |
verb (v. t.) To portray; to draw. |
retrait | noun (n.) A portrait; a likeness. |
refait | noun (n.) A drawn game; |
noun (n.) a state of the game in which the aggregate pip value of cards dealt to red equals that of those dealt to black. All bets are then off; unless the value is 31, in which case the banker wins half the stakes. |
sacalait | noun (n.) A kind of fresh-water bass; the crappie. |
strait | adjective (a.) A variant of Straight. |
adjective (a.) A narrow pass or passage. | |
adjective (a.) A (comparatively) narrow passageway connecting two large bodies of water; -- often in the plural; as, the strait, or straits, of Gibraltar; the straits of Magellan; the strait, or straits, of Mackinaw. | |
adjective (a.) A neck of land; an isthmus. | |
adjective (a.) Fig.: A condition of narrowness or restriction; doubt; distress; difficulty; poverty; perplexity; -- sometimes in the plural; as, reduced to great straits. | |
superlative (superl.) Narrow; not broad. | |
superlative (superl.) Tight; close; closely fitting. | |
superlative (superl.) Close; intimate; near; familiar. | |
superlative (superl.) Strict; scrupulous; rigorous. | |
superlative (superl.) Difficult; distressful; straited. | |
superlative (superl.) Parsimonious; niggargly; mean. | |
adverb (adv.) Strictly; rigorously. | |
verb (v. t.) To put to difficulties. |
whitebait | noun (n.) The young of several species of herrings, especially of the common herring, esteemed a great delicacy by epicures in England. |
noun (n.) A small translucent fish (Salanx Chinensis) abundant at certain seasons on the coasts of China and Japan, and used in the same manner as the European whitebait. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH TAİT (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (tai) - Words That Begins with tai:
tail | noun (n.) Limitation; abridgment. |
noun (n.) The terminal, and usually flexible, posterior appendage of an animal. | |
noun (n.) Any long, flexible terminal appendage; whatever resembles, in shape or position, the tail of an animal, as a catkin. | |
noun (n.) Hence, the back, last, lower, or inferior part of anything, -- as opposed to the head, or the superior part. | |
noun (n.) A train or company of attendants; a retinue. | |
noun (n.) The side of a coin opposite to that which bears the head, effigy, or date; the reverse; -- rarely used except in the expression "heads or tails," employed when a coin is thrown up for the purpose of deciding some point by its fall. | |
noun (n.) The distal tendon of a muscle. | |
noun (n.) A downy or feathery appendage to certain achenes. It is formed of the permanent elongated style. | |
noun (n.) A portion of an incision, at its beginning or end, which does not go through the whole thickness of the skin, and is more painful than a complete incision; -- called also tailing. | |
noun (n.) One of the strips at the end of a bandage formed by splitting the bandage one or more times. | |
noun (n.) A rope spliced to the strap of a block, by which it may be lashed to anything. | |
noun (n.) The part of a note which runs perpendicularly upward or downward from the head; the stem. | |
noun (n.) Same as Tailing, 4. | |
noun (n.) The bottom or lower portion of a member or part, as a slate or tile. | |
noun (n.) See Tailing, n., 5. | |
noun (n.) In some forms of rope-laying machine, pieces of rope attached to the iron bar passing through the grooven wooden top containing the strands, for wrapping around the rope to be laid. | |
noun (n.) A tailed coat; a tail coat. | |
noun (n.) In flying machines, a plane or group of planes used at the rear to confer stability. | |
adjective (a.) Limited; abridged; reduced; curtailed; as, estate tail. | |
verb (v. t.) To follow or hang to, like a tail; to be attached closely to, as that which can not be evaded. | |
verb (v. t.) To pull or draw by the tail. | |
verb (v. i.) To hold by the end; -- said of a timber when it rests upon a wall or other support; -- with in or into. | |
verb (v. i.) To swing with the stern in a certain direction; -- said of a vessel at anchor; as, this vessel tails down stream. |
tailage | noun (n.) See Tallage. |
tailblock | noun (n.) A block with a tail. See Tail, 9. |
tailboard | noun (n.) The board at the rear end of a cart or wagon, which can be removed or let down, for convenience in loading or unloading. |
tailed | adjective (a.) Having a tail; having (such) a tail or (so many) tails; -- chiefly used in composition; as, bobtailed, longtailed, etc. |
tailing | noun (n.) The part of a projecting stone or brick inserted in a wall. |
noun (n.) Same as Tail, n., 8 (a). | |
noun (n.) Sexual intercourse. | |
noun (n.) The lighter parts of grain separated from the seed threshing and winnowing; chaff. | |
noun (n.) The refuse part of stamped ore, thrown behind the tail of the buddle or washing apparatus. It is dressed over again to secure whatever metal may exist in it. Called also tails. | |
noun (n.) A prolongation of current in a telegraph line, due to capacity in the line and causing signals to run together. |
taille | noun (n.) A tally; an account scored on a piece of wood. |
noun (n.) Any imposition levied by the king, or any other lord, upon his subjects. | |
noun (n.) The French name for the tenor voice or part; also, for the tenor viol or viola. |
tailless | adjective (a.) Having no tail. |
taillie | noun (n.) Same as Tailzie. |
tailor | noun (n.) One whose occupation is to cut out and make men's garments; also, one who cuts out and makes ladies' outer garments. |
noun (n.) The mattowacca; -- called also tailor herring. | |
noun (n.) The silversides. | |
noun (n.) The goldfish. | |
verb (v. i.) To practice making men's clothes; to follow the business of a tailor. |
tailoring | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Tailor |
adverb (adv.) The business or the work of a tailor or a tailoress. |
tailoress | noun (n.) A female tailor. |
tailpiece | noun (n.) A piece at the end; an appendage. |
noun (n.) One of the timbers which tail into a header, in floor framing. See Illust. of Header. | |
noun (n.) An ornament placed at the bottom of a short page to fill up the space, or at the end of a book. | |
noun (n.) A piece of ebony or other material attached to the lower end of a violin or similar instrument, to which the strings are fastened. | |
noun (n.) A piece for transmitting motion from the hub of a lock to the latch bolt. | |
noun (n.) The part of a telescope containing the adjusting device for the eyepiece, etc. |
tailpin | noun (n.) The center in the spindle of a turning lathe. |
tailrace | noun (n.) See Race, n., 6. |
noun (n.) The channel in which tailings, suspended in water, are conducted away. |
tailstock | noun (n.) The sliding block or support, in a lathe, which carries the dead spindle, or adjustable center. The headstock supports the live spindle. |
tailzie | noun (n.) An entailment or deed whereby the legal course of succession is cut off, and an arbitrary one substituted. |
tain | noun (n.) Thin tin plate; also, tin foil for mirrors. |
taint | noun (n.) A thrust with a lance, which fails of its intended effect. |
noun (n.) An injury done to a lance in an encounter, without its being broken; also, a breaking of a lance in an encounter in a dishonorable or unscientific manner. | |
noun (n.) Tincture; hue; color; tinge. | |
noun (n.) Infection; corruption; deprivation. | |
noun (n.) A blemish on reputation; stain; spot; disgrace. | |
verb (v. i.) To thrust ineffectually with a lance. | |
verb (v. t.) To injure, as a lance, without breaking it; also, to break, as a lance, but usually in an unknightly or unscientific manner. | |
verb (v. t.) To hit or touch lightly, in tilting. | |
verb (v. t.) To imbue or impregnate with something extraneous, especially with something odious, noxious, or poisonous; hence, to corrupt; to infect; to poison; as, putrid substance taint the air. | |
verb (v. t.) Fig.: To stain; to sully; to tarnish. | |
verb (v. i.) To be infected or corrupted; to be touched with something corrupting. | |
verb (v. i.) To be affected with incipient putrefaction; as, meat soon taints in warm weather. | |
verb (v. t.) Aphetic form of Attaint. |
tainting | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Taint |
taintless | adjective (a.) Free from taint or infection; pure. |
tainture | noun (n.) Taint; tinge; difilement; stain; spot. |
taintworm | noun (n.) A destructive parasitic worm or insect larva. |
taira | noun (n.) Same as Tayra. |
tairn | noun (n.) See Tarn. |
tai | noun (n.) A member of one of the tribes of the Tai stock. |
adjective (a.) Designating, or pertaining to, the chief linguistic stock of Indo-China, including the peoples of Siamese and Shan speech. |
taiping | adjective (a.) Alt. of Taeping |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH TAİT:
English Words which starts with 't' and ends with 't':
tabaret | noun (n.) A stout silk having satin stripes, -- used for furniture. |
tabbinet | noun (n.) A fabric like poplin, with a watered surface. |
tabescent | adjective (a.) Withering, or wasting away. |
tabinet | noun (n.) See Tabbinet. |
tablement | noun (n.) A table. |
tablet | noun (n.) A small table or flat surface. |
noun (n.) A flat piece of any material on which to write, paint, draw, or engrave; also, such a piece containing an inscription or a picture. | |
noun (n.) Hence, a small picture; a miniature. | |
noun (n.) A kind of pocket memorandum book. | |
noun (n.) A flattish cake or piece; as, tablets of arsenic were formerly worn as a preservative against the plague. | |
noun (n.) A solid kind of electuary or confection, commonly made of dry ingredients with sugar, and usually formed into little flat squares; -- called also lozenge, and troche, especially when of a round or rounded form. |
taboret | noun (n.) A small tabor. |
tabouret | noun (n.) Same as Taboret. |
noun (n.) A seat without arms or back, cushioned and stuffed: a high stool; -- so called from its resemblance to a drum. | |
noun (n.) An embroidery frame. |
tabret | noun (n.) A taboret. |
tacit | adjective (a.) Done or made in silence; implied, but not expressed; silent; as, tacit consent is consent by silence, or by not interposing an objection. |
tacket | noun (n.) A small, broad-headed nail. |
tact | noun (n.) The sense of touch; feeling. |
noun (n.) The stroke in beating time. | |
noun (n.) Sensitive mental touch; peculiar skill or faculty; nice perception or discernment; ready power of appreciating and doing what is required by circumstances. |
tagbelt | noun (n.) Same as Tagsore. |
taglet | noun (n.) A little tag. |
talbot | noun (n.) A sort of dog, noted for quick scent and eager pursuit of game. |
talipot | noun (n.) A beautiful tropical palm tree (Corypha umbraculifera), a native of Ceylon and the Malabar coast. It has a trunk sixty or seventy feet high, bearing a crown of gigantic fan-shaped leaves which are used as umbrellas and as fans in ceremonial processions, and, when cut into strips, as a substitute for writing paper. |
talmudist | noun (n.) One versed in the Talmud; one who adheres to the teachings of the Talmud. |
tambreet | noun (n.) The duck mole. |
tangent | adjective (a.) Touching; touching at a single point |
adjective (a.) meeting a curve or surface at a point and having at that point the same direction as the curve or surface; -- said of a straight line, curve, or surface; as, a line tangent to a curve; a curve tangent to a surface; tangent surfaces. | |
verb (v. t.) A tangent line curve, or surface; specifically, that portion of the straight line tangent to a curve that is between the point of tangency and a given line, the given line being, for example, the axis of abscissas, or a radius of a circle produced. See Trigonometrical function, under Function. |
tanist | noun (n.) In Ireland, a lord or proprietor of a tract of land or of a castle, elected by a family, under the system of tanistry. |
tant | noun (n.) A small scarlet arachnid. |
tantamount | adjective (a.) Equivalent in value, signification, or effect. |
verb (v. i.) To be tantamount or equivalent; to amount. |
tapet | noun (n.) Worked or figured stuff; tapestry. |
tappet | noun (n.) A lever or projection moved by some other piece, as a cam, or intended to tap or touch something else, with a view to produce change or regulate motion. |
taproot | noun (n.) The root of a plant which penetrates the earth directly downward to a considerable depth without dividing. |
target | noun (n.) A kind of small shield or buckler, used as a defensive weapon in war. |
noun (n.) A butt or mark to shoot at, as for practice, or to test the accuracy of a firearm, or the force of a projectile. | |
noun (n.) The pattern or arrangement of a series of hits made by a marksman on a butt or mark; as, he made a good target. | |
noun (n.) The sliding crosspiece, or vane, on a leveling staff. | |
noun (n.) A conspicuous disk attached to a switch lever to show its position, or for use as a signal. | |
noun (n.) A thin cut; a slice; specif., of lamb, a piece consisting of the neck and breast joints. | |
noun (n.) A tassel or pendent; also, a shred; tatter. |
targumist | noun (n.) The writer of a Targum; one versed in the Targums. |
tarot | noun (n.) A game of cards; -- called also taroc. |
tart | noun (n.) A species of small open pie, or piece of pastry, containing jelly or conserve; a sort of fruit pie. |
verb (v. t.) Sharp to the taste; acid; sour; as, a tart apple. | |
verb (v. t.) Fig.: Sharp; keen; severe; as, a tart reply; tart language; a tart rebuke. |
tartlet | noun (n.) A small tart. |
taslet | noun (n.) A piece of armor formerly worn to guard the things; a tasse. |
tasset | noun (n.) A defense for the front of the thigh, consisting of one or more iron plates hanging from the belt on the lower edge of the corselet. |
tat | noun (n.) Gunny cloth made from the fiber of the Corchorus olitorius, or jute. |
noun (n.) A pony. |
taught | adjective (a.) See Taut. |
() imp. & p. p. of Teach. | |
(imp. & p. p.) of Teach |
taunt | noun (n.) Upbraiding language; bitter or sarcastic reproach; insulting invective. |
adjective (a.) Very high or tall; as, a ship with taunt masts. | |
verb (v. t.) To reproach with severe or insulting words; to revile; to upbraid; to jeer at; to flout. |
taut | adjective (a.) Tight; stretched; not slack; -- said esp. of a rope that is tightly strained. |
adjective (a.) Snug; close; firm; secure. |
tautologist | noun (n.) One who uses tautological words or phrases. |
taxidermist | noun (n.) A person skilled in taxidermy. |
taxonomist | noun (n.) One skilled in taxonomy. |
teapot | noun (n.) A vessel with a spout, in which tea is made, and from which it is poured into teacups. |
tearpit | noun (n.) A cavity or pouch beneath the lower eyelid of most deer and antelope; the lachrymal sinus; larmier. It is capable of being opened at pleasure and secretes a waxy substance. |
teat | noun (n.) The protuberance through which milk is drawn from the udder or breast of a mammal; a nipple; a pap; a mammilla; a dug; a tit. |
noun (n.) A small protuberance or nozzle resembling the teat of an animal. |
technicist | noun (n.) One skilled in technics or in one or more of the practical arts. |
technologist | noun (n.) One skilled in technology; one who treats of arts, or of the terms of arts. |
teest | noun (n.) A tinsmith's stake, or small anvil. |
teewit | noun (n.) The pewit. |
tegument | noun (n.) A cover or covering; an integument. |
noun (n.) Especially, the covering of a living body, or of some part or organ of such a body; skin; hide. |
teint | noun (n.) Tint; color; tinge, See Tint. |
telegraphist | noun (n.) One skilled in telegraphy; a telegrapher. |
teleologist | noun (n.) One versed in teleology. |
teleost | noun (n.) One of the Teleosti. Also used adjectively. |
telescopist | noun (n.) One who uses a telescope. |
telluret | noun (n.) A telluride. |
tempest | noun (n.) An extensive current of wind, rushing with great velocity and violence, and commonly attended with rain, hail, or snow; a furious storm. |
noun (n.) Fig.: Any violent tumult or commotion; as, a political tempest; a tempest of war, or of the passions. | |
noun (n.) A fashionable assembly; a drum. See the Note under Drum, n., 4. | |
verb (v. t.) To disturb as by a tempest. | |
verb (v. i.) To storm. |
templet | noun (n.) A gauge, pattern, or mold, commonly a thin plate or board, used as a guide to the form of the work to be executed; as, a mason's or a wheelwright's templet. |
noun (n.) A short piece of timber, iron, or stone, placed in a wall under a girder or other beam, to distribute the weight or pressure. |
temporist | noun (n.) A temporizer. |
temulent | adjective (a.) Intoxicated; drunken. |
tenant | noun (n.) One who holds or possesses lands, or other real estate, by any kind of right, whether in fee simple, in common, in severalty, for life, for years, or at will; also, one who has the occupation or temporary possession of lands or tenements the title of which is in another; -- correlative to landlord. See Citation from Blackstone, under Tenement, 2. |
noun (n.) One who has possession of any place; a dweller; an occupant. | |
verb (v. t.) To hold, occupy, or possess as a tenant. |
tenderfoot | noun (n.) A delicate person; one not inured to the hardship and rudeness of pioneer life. |
noun (n.) See Boy scout. |
tendment | noun (n.) Attendance; care. |
tenement | noun (n.) That which is held of another by service; property which one holds of a lord or proprietor in consideration of some military or pecuniary service; fief; fee. |
noun (n.) Any species of permanent property that may be held, so as to create a tenancy, as lands, houses, rents, commons, an office, an advowson, a franchise, a right of common, a peerage, and the like; -- called also free / frank tenements. | |
noun (n.) A dwelling house; a building for a habitation; also, an apartment, or suite of rooms, in a building, used by one family; often, a house erected to be rented. | |
noun (n.) Fig.: Dwelling; abode; habitation. |
tenent | noun (n.) A tenet. |
tenet | noun (n.) Any opinion, principle, dogma, belief, or doctrine, which a person holds or maintains as true; as, the tenets of Plato or of Cicero. |
tent | noun (n.) A kind of wine of a deep red color, chiefly from Galicia or Malaga in Spain; -- called also tent wine, and tinta. |
noun (n.) Attention; regard, care. | |
noun (n.) Intention; design. | |
noun (n.) A roll of lint or linen, or a conical or cylindrical piece of sponge or other absorbent, used chiefly to dilate a natural canal, to keep open the orifice of a wound, or to absorb discharges. | |
noun (n.) A probe for searching a wound. | |
noun (n.) A pavilion or portable lodge consisting of skins, canvas, or some strong cloth, stretched and sustained by poles, -- used for sheltering persons from the weather, especially soldiers in camp. | |
noun (n.) The representation of a tent used as a bearing. | |
verb (v. t.) To attend to; to heed; hence, to guard; to hinder. | |
verb (v. t.) To probe or to search with a tent; to keep open with a tent; as, to tent a wound. Used also figuratively. | |
verb (v. i.) To lodge as a tent; to tabernacle. |
tentaculocyst | noun (n.) One of the auditory organs of certain medusae; -- called also auditory tentacle. |
tentwort | noun (n.) A kind of small fern, the wall rue. See under Wall. |
tercelet | noun (n.) A male hawk or eagle; a tiercelet. |
tercet | noun (n.) A triplet. |
noun (n.) A triplet; a group of three lines. |
terebrant | adjective (a.) Boring, or adapted for boring; -- said of certain Hymenoptera, as the sawflies. |
teret | adjective (a.) Round; terete. |
tergant | adjective (a.) Showing the back; as, the eagle tergant. |
termagant | noun (n.) An imaginary being supposed by the Christians to be a Mohammedan deity or false god. He is represented in the ancient moralities, farces, and puppet shows as extremely vociferous and tumultous. |
noun (n.) A boisterous, brawling, turbulent person; -- formerly applied to both sexes, now only to women. | |
adjective (a.) Tumultuous; turbulent; boisterous; furious; quarrelsome; scolding. |
terminant | noun (n.) Termination; ending. |
terminist | noun (n.) One of a class of theologians who maintain that God has fixed a certain term for the probation of individual persons, during which period, and no longer, they have the offer to grace. |
terret | noun (n.) One of the rings on the top of the saddle of a harness, through which the reins pass. |
terrorist | noun (n.) One who governs by terrorism or intimidation; specifically, an agent or partisan of the revolutionary tribunal during the Reign of Terror in France. |
tersulphuret | noun (n.) A trisulphide. |
test | noun (n.) A cupel or cupelling hearth in which precious metals are melted for trial and refinement. |
noun (n.) Examination or trial by the cupel; hence, any critical examination or decisive trial; as, to put a man's assertions to a test. | |
noun (n.) Means of trial; as, absence is a test of love. | |
noun (n.) That with which anything is compared for proof of its genuineness; a touchstone; a standard. | |
noun (n.) Discriminative characteristic; standard of judgment; ground of admission or exclusion. | |
noun (n.) Judgment; distinction; discrimination. | |
noun (n.) A reaction employed to recognize or distinguish any particular substance or constituent of a compound, as the production of some characteristic precipitate; also, the reagent employed to produce such reaction; thus, the ordinary test for sulphuric acid is the production of a white insoluble precipitate of barium sulphate by means of some soluble barium salt. | |
noun (n.) A witness. | |
noun (n.) Alt. of Testa | |
verb (v. t.) To refine, as gold or silver, in a test, or cupel; to subject to cupellation. | |
verb (v. t.) To put to the proof; to prove the truth, genuineness, or quality of by experiment, or by some principle or standard; to try; as, to test the soundness of a principle; to test the validity of an argument. | |
verb (v. t.) To examine or try, as by the use of some reagent; as, to test a solution by litmus paper. | |
verb (v. i.) To make a testament, or will. |
testament | noun (n.) A solemn, authentic instrument in writing, by which a person declares his will as to disposal of his estate and effects after his death. |
noun (n.) One of the two distinct revelations of God's purposes toward man; a covenant; also, one of the two general divisions of the canonical books of the sacred Scriptures, in which the covenants are respectively revealed; as, the Old Testament; the New Testament; -- often limited, in colloquial language, to the latter. |
tetradont | noun (a. & n.) See Tetrodont. |
tetravalent | adjective (a.) Having a valence of four; tetratomic; quadrivalent. |
tetrodont | noun (n.) A tetrodon. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the tetrodons. |
tetterwort | noun (n.) A plant used as a remedy for tetter, -- in England the calendine, in America the bloodroot. |
teufit | noun (n.) The lapwing; -- called also teuchit. |
tewhit | noun (n.) The lapwing; -- called also teewheep. |
text | noun (n.) A discourse or composition on which a note or commentary is written; the original words of an author, in distinction from a paraphrase, annotation, or commentary. |
noun (n.) The four Gospels, by way of distinction or eminence. | |
noun (n.) A verse or passage of Scripture, especially one chosen as the subject of a sermon, or in proof of a doctrine. | |
noun (n.) Hence, anything chosen as the subject of an argument, literary composition, or the like; topic; theme. | |
noun (n.) A style of writing in large characters; text-hand also, a kind of type used in printing; as, German text. | |
verb (v. t.) To write in large characters, as in text hand. |
textualist | noun (n.) A textman; a textuary. |
textuarist | noun (n.) A textuary. |
textuist | noun (n.) A textualist; a textman. |
thaught | noun (n.) See Thwart. |
thaumaturgist | noun (n.) One who deals in wonders, or believes in them; a wonder worker. |
theanthropist | noun (n.) One who advocates, or believes in, theanthropism. |
thecodont | noun (n.) One of the Thecodontia. |
adjective (a.) Having the teeth inserted in sockets in the alveoli of the jaws. | |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the thecodonts. |
theft | noun (n.) The act of stealing; specifically, the felonious taking and removing of personal property, with an intent to deprive the rightful owner of the same; larceny. |
noun (n.) The thing stolen. |
theist | noun (n.) One who believes in the existence of a God; especially, one who believes in a personal God; -- opposed to atheist. |
theocrat | noun (n.) One who lives under a theocratic form of government; one who in civil affairs conforms to divine law. |
theogonist | noun (n.) A writer on theogony. |
theologist | noun (n.) A theologian. |
theomachist | noun (n.) One who fights against the gods; one who resists God of the divine will. |
theophilanthropist | noun (n.) A member of a deistical society established at Paris during the French revolution. |