VANCE
First name VANCE's origin is English. VANCE means "marshland". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with VANCE below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of vance.(Brown names are of the same origin (English) with VANCE and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming VANCE
FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES VANCE AS A WHOLE:
NAMES RHYMING WITH VANCE (According to last letters):
Rhyming Names According to Last 4 Letters (ance) - Names That Ends with ance:
candance yohance lance ance aviance caidance france kaidance kaydance morgance chance darrance derrance leodegrance lorance terrance torrance laudegrance bellance constance dorranceRhyming Names According to Last 3 Letters (nce) - Names That Ends with nce:
caydence clemence essence florence kadence kadience kaedence kaydence kaydience ronce chaunce darence darrence laurence lawrence leodegraunce leonce lorence nahcomence ponce prince spence tarrence terrence vince ryence cadence patience terence torence torrenceRhyming Names According to Last 2 Letters (ce) - Names That Ends with ce:
fenice alarice canace circe dice dirce eunice eurydice glauce helice kalonice benoyce prentice anstice eustace maurice aleece aleyece alice allyce alyce anice annice berenice bernice bernyce brandice brandyce candace candice candyce caprice catrice cherice clarice danice darice delice denice deniece derorice dulce ellice ellyce elyce felice galice ganiceNAMES RHYMING WITH VANCE (According to first letters):
Rhyming Names According to First 4 Letters (vanc) - Names That Begins with vanc:
Rhyming Names According to First 3 Letters (van) - Names That Begins with van:
van vanda vande vandenberg vanderbilt vanderpool vanderveer vandyke vanesa vanessa vania vanko vanna vannes vannyRhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (va) - Names That Begins with va:
vac vach vachel vaden vadit vafara vail vaino vaiveahtoish val valara valborga valdemar valdemarr valdeze vale valen valencia valentin valentina valentine valentino valeraine valere valerica valerie valeriu vali valiant valicia valkoinen vallen vallis vallois vappu var vara varaza varda vardan varden vardit vardon vare vareck vared varek vargovic varik varney vartan vartoughi varunani varvara varyk vasek vasile vasileios vasilis vasos vasudev vaughan vaughn vavara vayleNAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH VANCE:
First Names which starts with 'va' and ends with 'ce':
First Names which starts with 'v' and ends with 'e':
vedette velouette verbrugge verene verge verne veronique vibeke vicente victorine vidette vignette viheke villette vincente vincze vinnie vinsone viollette viviane vivianne vivienne vohkinne volante voshkie vrommeEnglish Words Rhyming VANCE
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES VANCE AS A WHOLE:
achievance | noun (n.) Achievement. |
advance | adjective (a.) Before in place, or beforehand in time; -- used for advanced; as, an advance guard, or that before the main guard or body of an army; advance payment, or that made before it is due; advance proofs, advance sheets, pages of a forthcoming volume, received in advance of the time of publication. |
verb (v. t.) To bring forward; to move towards the van or front; to make to go on. | |
verb (v. t.) To raise; to elevate. | |
verb (v. t.) To raise to a higher rank; to promote. | |
verb (v. t.) To accelerate the growth or progress; to further; to forward; to help on; to aid; to heighten; as, to advance the ripening of fruit; to advance one's interests. | |
verb (v. t.) To bring to view or notice; to offer or propose; to show; as, to advance an argument. | |
verb (v. t.) To make earlier, as an event or date; to hasten. | |
verb (v. t.) To furnish, as money or other value, before it becomes due, or in aid of an enterprise; to supply beforehand; as, a merchant advances money on a contract or on goods consigned to him. | |
verb (v. t.) To raise to a higher point; to enhance; to raise in rate; as, to advance the price of goods. | |
verb (v. t.) To extol; to laud. | |
verb (v. i.) To move or go forward; to proceed; as, he advanced to greet me. | |
verb (v. i.) To increase or make progress in any respect; as, to advance in knowledge, in stature, in years, in price. | |
verb (v. i.) To rise in rank, office, or consequence; to be preferred or promoted. | |
verb (v.) The act of advancing or moving forward or upward; progress. | |
verb (v.) Improvement or progression, physically, mentally, morally, or socially; as, an advance in health, knowledge, or religion; an advance in rank or office. | |
verb (v.) An addition to the price; rise in price or value; as, an advance on the prime cost of goods. | |
verb (v.) The first step towards the attainment of a result; approach made to gain favor, to form an acquaintance, to adjust a difference, etc.; an overture; a tender; an offer; -- usually in the plural. | |
verb (v.) A furnishing of something before an equivalent is received (as money or goods), towards a capital or stock, or on loan; payment beforehand; the money or goods thus furnished; money or value supplied beforehand. |
advanced | adjective (a.) In the van or front. |
adjective (a.) In the front or before others, as regards progress or ideas; as, advanced opinions, advanced thinkers. | |
adjective (a.) Far on in life or time. | |
(imp. & p. p.) of Advance |
advancer | noun (n.) One who advances; a promoter. |
noun (n.) A second branch of a buck's antler. |
aggrievance | noun (n.) Oppression; hardship; injury; grievance. |
approvance | noun (n.) Approval. |
arrivance | noun (n.) Arrival. |
chievance | noun (n.) An unlawful bargain; traffic in which money is exported as discount. |
connivance | noun (n.) Intentional failure or forbearance to discover a fault or wrongdoing; voluntary oversight; passive consent or cooperation. |
noun (n.) Corrupt or guilty assent to wrongdoing, not involving actual participation in, but knowledge of, and failure to prevent or oppose it. |
contrivance | noun (n.) The act or faculty of contriving, inventing, devising, or planning. |
noun (n.) The thing contrived, invented, or planned; disposition of parts or causes by design; a scheme; plan; atrifice; arrangement. |
grievancer | noun (n.) One who occasions a grievance; one who gives ground for complaint. |
inobservance | adjective (a.) Want or neglect of observance. |
irrelavance | noun (n.) Irrelevancy. |
nonobservance | noun (n.) Neglect or failure to observe or fulfill. |
observance | noun (n.) The act or practice of observing or noticing with attention; a heeding or keeping with care; performance; -- usually with a sense of strictness and fidelity; as, the observance of the Sabbath is general; the strict observance of duties. |
noun (n.) An act, ceremony, or rite, as of worship or respect; especially, a customary act or service of attention; a form; a practice; a rite; a custom. | |
noun (n.) Servile attention; sycophancy. |
perceivance | noun (n.) Power of perceiving. |
relevance | noun (n.) Alt. of Relevancy |
reservance | noun (n.) Reservation. |
survivance | noun (n.) Alt. of Survivancy |
unobservance | noun (n.) Want or neglect of observance; inobservance. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH VANCE (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (ance) - English Words That Ends with ance:
abaisance | noun (n.) Obeisance. |
abearance | noun (n.) Behavior. |
aberrance | noun (n.) Alt. of Aberrancy |
abeyance | noun (n.) Expectancy; condition of being undetermined. |
noun (n.) Suspension; temporary suppression. |
abidance | noun (n.) The state of abiding; abode; continuance; compliance (with). |
abodance | noun (n.) An omen; a portending. |
abundance | noun (n.) An overflowing fullness; ample sufficiency; great plenty; profusion; copious supply; superfluity; wealth: -- strictly applicable to quantity only, but sometimes used of number. |
acceptance | noun (n.) The act of accepting; a receiving what is offered, with approbation, satisfaction, or acquiescence; esp., favorable reception; approval; as, the acceptance of a gift, office, doctrine, etc. |
noun (n.) State of being accepted; acceptableness. | |
noun (n.) An assent and engagement by the person on whom a bill of exchange is drawn, to pay it when due according to the terms of the acceptance. | |
noun (n.) The bill itself when accepted. | |
noun (n.) An agreeing to terms or proposals by which a bargain is concluded and the parties are bound; the reception or taking of a thing bought as that for which it was bought, or as that agreed to be delivered, or the taking possession as owner. | |
noun (n.) An agreeing to the action of another, by some act which binds the person in law. | |
noun (n.) Meaning; acceptation. |
accordance | noun (n.) Agreement; harmony; conformity. |
accustomance | noun (n.) Custom; habitual use. |
acquaintance | noun (n.) A state of being acquainted, or of having intimate, or more than slight or superficial, knowledge; personal knowledge gained by intercourse short of that of friendship or intimacy; as, I know the man; but have no acquaintance with him. |
noun (n.) A person or persons with whom one is acquainted. |
acquittance | noun (n.) The clearing off of debt or obligation; a release or discharge from debt or other liability. |
noun (n.) A writing which is evidence of a discharge; a receipt in full, which bars a further demand. | |
verb (v. t.) To acquit. |
admirance | noun (n.) Admiration. |
admittance | noun (n.) The act of admitting. |
noun (n.) Permission to enter; the power or right of entrance; also, actual entrance; reception. | |
noun (n.) Concession; admission; allowance; as, the admittance of an argument. | |
noun (n.) Admissibility. | |
noun (n.) The act of giving possession of a copyhold estate. | |
noun (n.) The reciprocal of impedance. |
affiance | noun (n.) Plighted faith; marriage contract or promise. |
noun (n.) Trust; reliance; faith; confidence. | |
verb (v. t.) To betroth; to pledge one's faith to for marriage, or solemnly promise (one's self or another) in marriage. | |
verb (v. t.) To assure by promise. |
affirmance | noun (n.) Confirmation; ratification; confirmation of a voidable act. |
noun (n.) A strong declaration; affirmation. |
aidance | noun (n.) Aid. |
allegeance | noun (n.) Allegation. |
allegiance | noun (n.) The tie or obligation, implied or expressed, which a subject owes to his sovereign or government; the duty of fidelity to one's king, government, or state. |
noun (n.) Devotion; loyalty; as, allegiance to science. |
alliance | noun (n.) The state of being allied; the act of allying or uniting; a union or connection of interests between families, states, parties, etc., especially between families by marriage and states by compact, treaty, or league; as, matrimonial alliances; an alliance between church and state; an alliance between France and England. |
noun (n.) Any union resembling that of families or states; union by relationship in qualities; affinity. | |
noun (n.) The persons or parties allied. | |
verb (v. t.) To connect by alliance; to ally. |
allowance | noun (n.) Approval; approbation. |
noun (n.) The act of allowing, granting, conceding, or admitting; authorization; permission; sanction; tolerance. | |
noun (n.) Acknowledgment. | |
noun (n.) License; indulgence. | |
noun (n.) That which is allowed; a share or portion allotted or granted; a sum granted as a reimbursement, a bounty, or as appropriate for any purpose; a stated quantity, as of food or drink; hence, a limited quantity of meat and drink, when provisions fall short. | |
noun (n.) Abatement; deduction; the taking into account of mitigating circumstances; as, to make allowance for the inexperience of youth. | |
noun (n.) A customary deduction from the gross weight of goods, different in different countries, such as tare and tret. | |
noun (n.) To put upon a fixed allowance (esp. of provisions and drink); to supply in a fixed and limited quantity; as, the captain was obliged to allowance his crew; our provisions were allowanced. |
allurance | noun (n.) Allurement. |
ambulance | noun (n.) A field hospital, so organized as to follow an army in its movements, and intended to succor the wounded as soon as possible. Often used adjectively; as, an ambulance wagon; ambulance stretcher; ambulance corps. |
noun (n.) An ambulance wagon or cart for conveying the wounded from the field, or to a hospital. |
amenance | noun (n.) Behavior; bearing. |
annoyance | noun (n.) The act of annoying, or the state of being annoyed; molestation; vexation; annoy. |
noun (n.) That which annoys. |
appearance | noun (n.) The act of appearing or coming into sight; the act of becoming visible to the eye; as, his sudden appearance surprised me. |
noun (n.) A thing seed; a phenomenon; a phase; an apparition; as, an appearance in the sky. | |
noun (n.) Personal presence; exhibition of the person; look; aspect; mien. | |
noun (n.) Semblance, or apparent likeness; external show. pl. Outward signs, or circumstances, fitted to make a particular impression or to determine the judgment as to the character of a person or a thing, an act or a state; as, appearances are against him. | |
noun (n.) The act of appearing in a particular place, or in society, a company, or any proceedings; a coming before the public in a particular character; as, a person makes his appearance as an historian, an artist, or an orator. | |
noun (n.) Probability; likelihood. | |
noun (n.) The coming into court of either of the parties; the being present in court; the coming into court of a party summoned in an action, either by himself or by his attorney, expressed by a formal entry by the proper officer to that effect; the act or proceeding by which a party proceeded against places himself before the court, and submits to its jurisdiction. |
appendance | noun (n.) Something appendant. |
appertinance | noun (n.) Alt. of Appertinence |
appliance | noun (n.) The act of applying; application; [Obs.] subservience. |
noun (n.) The thing applied or used as a means to an end; an apparatus or device; as, to use various appliances; a mechanical appliance; a machine with its appliances. |
appurtenance | noun (n.) That which belongs to something else; an adjunct; an appendage; an accessory; something annexed to another thing more worthy; in common parlance and legal acceptation, something belonging to another thing as principal, and which passes as incident to it, as a right of way, or other easement to land; a right of common to pasture, an outhouse, barn, garden, or orchard, to a house or messuage. In a strict legal sense, land can never pass as an appurtenance to land. |
arrogance | noun (n.) The act or habit of arrogating, or making undue claims in an overbearing manner; that species of pride which consists in exorbitant claims of rank, dignity, estimation, or power, or which exalts the worth or importance of the person to an undue degree; proud contempt of others; lordliness; haughtiness; self-assumption; presumption. |
ascendance | noun (n.) Same as Ascendency. |
assemblance | noun (n.) Resemblance; likeness; appearance. |
noun (n.) An assembling; assemblage. |
assistance | noun (n.) The act of assisting; help; aid; furtherance; succor; support. |
noun (n.) An assistant or helper; a body of helpers. | |
noun (n.) Persons present. |
assonance | noun (n.) Resemblance of sound. |
noun (n.) A peculiar species of rhyme, in which the last acce`ted vow`l and tnose whioh follow it in one word correspond in sound with the vowels of another word, while the consonants of the two words are unlike in sound; as, calamo and platano, baby and chary. | |
noun (n.) Incomplete correspondence. |
assurance | noun (n.) The act of assuring; a declaration tending to inspire full confidence; that which is designed to give confidence. |
noun (n.) The state of being assured; firm persuasion; full confidence or trust; freedom from doubt; certainty. | |
noun (n.) Firmness of mind; undoubting, steadiness; intrepidity; courage; confidence; self-reliance. | |
noun (n.) Excess of boldness; impudence; audacity; as, his assurance is intolerable. | |
noun (n.) Betrothal; affiance. | |
noun (n.) Insurance; a contract for the payment of a sum on occasion of a certain event, as loss or death. | |
noun (n.) Any written or other legal evidence of the conveyance of property; a conveyance; a deed. |
attemperance | noun (n.) Temperance; attemperament. |
avengeance | noun (n.) Vengeance. |
avoidance | noun (n.) The act of annulling; annulment. |
noun (n.) The act of becoming vacant, or the state of being vacant; -- specifically used for the state of a benefice becoming void by the death, deprivation, or resignation of the incumbent. | |
noun (n.) A dismissing or a quitting; removal; withdrawal. | |
noun (n.) The act of avoiding or shunning; keeping clear of. | |
noun (n.) The courts by which anything is carried off. |
avowance | noun (n.) Act of avowing; avowal. |
noun (n.) Upholding; defense; vindication. |
balance | noun (n.) An apparatus for weighing. |
noun (n.) Act of weighing mentally; comparison; estimate. | |
noun (n.) Equipoise between the weights in opposite scales. | |
noun (n.) The state of being in equipoise; equilibrium; even adjustment; steadiness. | |
noun (n.) An equality between the sums total of the two sides of an account; as, to bring one's accounts to a balance; -- also, the excess on either side; as, the balance of an account. | |
noun (n.) A balance wheel, as of a watch, or clock. See Balance wheel (in the Vocabulary). | |
noun (n.) The constellation Libra. | |
noun (n.) The seventh sign in the Zodiac, called Libra, which the sun enters at the equinox in September. | |
noun (n.) A movement in dancing. See Balance, v. i., S. | |
noun (n.) To bring to an equipoise, as the scales of a balance by adjusting the weights; to weigh in a balance. | |
noun (n.) To support on a narrow base, so as to keep from falling; as, to balance a plate on the end of a cane; to balance one's self on a tight rope. | |
noun (n.) To equal in number, weight, force, or proportion; to counterpoise, counterbalance, counteract, or neutralize. | |
noun (n.) To compare in relative force, importance, value, etc.; to estimate. | |
noun (n.) To settle and adjust, as an account; to make two accounts equal by paying the difference between them. | |
noun (n.) To make the sums of the debits and credits of an account equal; -- said of an item; as, this payment, or credit, balances the account. | |
noun (n.) To arrange accounts in such a way that the sum total of the debits is equal to the sum total of the credits; as, to balance a set of books. | |
noun (n.) To move toward, and then back from, reciprocally; as, to balance partners. | |
noun (n.) To contract, as a sail, into a narrower compass; as, to balance the boom mainsail. | |
verb (v. i.) To have equal weight on each side; to be in equipoise; as, the scales balance. | |
verb (v. i.) To fluctuate between motives which appear of equal force; to waver; to hesitate. | |
verb (v. i.) To move toward a person or couple, and then back. |
boastance | noun (n.) Boasting. |
bobance | noun (n.) A boasting. |
brillance | noun (n.) Brilliancy. |
buoyance | noun (n.) Buoyancy. |
chance | noun (n.) A supposed material or psychical agent or mode of activity other than a force, law, or purpose; fortune; fate; -- in this sense often personified. |
noun (n.) The operation or activity of such agent. | |
noun (n.) The supposed effect of such an agent; something that befalls, as the result of unknown or unconsidered forces; the issue of uncertain conditions; an event not calculated upon; an unexpected occurrence; a happening; accident; fortuity; casualty. | |
noun (n.) A possibility; a likelihood; an opportunity; -- with reference to a doubtful result; as, a chance to escape; a chance for life; the chances are all against him. | |
noun (n.) Probability. | |
adjective (a.) Happening by chance; casual. | |
verb (v. i.) To happen, come, or arrive, without design or expectation. | |
verb (v. t.) To take the chances of; to venture upon; -- usually with it as object. | |
verb (v. t.) To befall; to happen to. | |
adverb (adv.) By chance; perchance. |
chevisance | noun (n.) Achievement; deed; performance. |
noun (n.) A bargain; profit; gain. | |
noun (n.) A making of contracts. | |
noun (n.) A bargain or contract; an agreement about a matter in dispute, such as a debt; a business compact. | |
noun (n.) An unlawful agreement or contract. |
circumstance | noun (n.) That which attends, or relates to, or in some way affects, a fact or event; an attendant thing or state of things. |
noun (n.) An event; a fact; a particular incident. | |
noun (n.) Circumlocution; detail. | |
noun (n.) Condition in regard to worldly estate; state of property; situation; surroundings. | |
verb (v. t.) To place in a particular situation; to supply relative incidents. |
clairvoyance | noun (n.) A power, attributed to some persons while in a mesmeric state, of discering objects not perceptible by the senses in their normal condition. |
clearance | noun (n.) The act of clearing; as, to make a thorough clearance. |
noun (n.) A certificate that a ship or vessel has been cleared at the customhouse; permission to sail. | |
noun (n.) Clear or net profit. | |
noun (n.) The distance by which one object clears another, as the distance between the piston and cylinder head at the end of a stroke in a steam engine, or the least distance between the point of a cogwheel tooth and the bottom of a space between teeth of a wheel with which it engages. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (nce) - English Words That Ends with nce:
abhorrence | noun (n.) Extreme hatred or detestation; the feeling of utter dislike. |
abscondence | noun (n.) Fugitive concealment; secret retirement; hiding. |
absence | noun (n.) A state of being absent or withdrawn from a place or from companionship; -- opposed to presence. |
noun (n.) Want; destitution; withdrawal. | |
noun (n.) Inattention to things present; abstraction (of mind); as, absence of mind. |
absistence | noun (n.) A standing aloof. |
abstinence | noun (n.) The act or practice of abstaining; voluntary forbearance of any action, especially the refraining from an indulgence of appetite, or from customary gratifications of animal or sensual propensities. Specifically, the practice of abstaining from intoxicating beverages, -- called also total abstinence. |
noun (n.) The practice of self-denial by depriving one's self of certain kinds of food or drink, especially of meat. |
accedence | noun (n.) The act of acceding. |
accidence | noun (n.) The accidents, of inflections of words; the rudiments of grammar. |
noun (n.) The rudiments of any subject. |
accrescence | noun (n.) Continuous growth; an accretion. |
acescence | noun (n.) Alt. of Acescency |
acquiescence | noun (n.) A silent or passive assent or submission, or a submission with apparent content; -- distinguished from avowed consent on the one hand, and on the other, from opposition or open discontent; quiet satisfaction. |
noun (n.) Submission to an injury by the party injured. | |
noun (n.) Tacit concurrence in the action of another. |
acturience | noun (n.) Tendency or impulse to act. |
acustumaunce | noun (n.) See Accustomance. |
adherence | noun (n.) The quality or state of adhering. |
noun (n.) The state of being fixed in attachment; fidelity; steady attachment; adhesion; as, adherence to a party or to opinions. |
adolescence | noun (n.) The state of growing up from childhood to manhood or womanhood; youth, or the period of life between puberty and maturity, generally considered to be, in the male sex, from fourteen to twenty-one. Sometimes used with reference to the lower animals. |
affluence | noun (n.) A flowing to or towards; a concourse; an influx. |
noun (n.) An abundant supply, as of thought, words, feelings, etc.; profusion; also, abundance of property; wealth. |
albescence | noun (n.) The act of becoming white; whitishness. |
alkalescence | noun (n.) Alt. of Alkalescency |
altiloquence | noun (n.) Lofty speech; pompous language. |
antecedence | noun (n.) The act or state of going before in time; precedence. |
noun (n.) An apparent motion of a planet toward the west; retrogradation. |
apparence | noun (n.) Appearance. |
appendence | noun (n.) Alt. of Appendency |
appertinence | noun (n.) See Appurtenance. |
appetence | noun (n.) A longing; a desire; especially an ardent desire; appetite; appetency. |
arborescence | noun (n.) The state of being arborescent; the resemblance to a tree in minerals, or crystallizations, or groups of crystals in that form; as, the arborescence produced by precipitating silver. |
armipotence | noun (n.) Power in arms. |
audience | adjective (a.) The act of hearing; attention to sounds. |
adjective (a.) Admittance to a hearing; a formal interview, esp. with a sovereign or the head of a government, for conference or the transaction of business. | |
adjective (a.) An auditory; an assembly of hearers. Also applied by authors to their readers. |
belligerence | noun (n.) Alt. of Belligerency |
beneficence | noun (n.) The practice of doing good; active goodness, kindness, or charity; bounty springing from purity and goodness. |
benevolence | noun (n.) The disposition to do good; good will; charitableness; love of mankind, accompanied with a desire to promote their happiness. |
noun (n.) An act of kindness; good done; charity given. | |
noun (n.) A species of compulsory contribution or tax, which has sometimes been illegally exacted by arbitrary kings of England, and falsely represented as a gratuity. |
blandiloquence | noun (n.) Mild, flattering speech. |
bonce | noun (n.) A boy's game played with large marbles. |
bounce | noun (n.) A sudden leap or bound; a rebound. |
noun (n.) A heavy, sudden, and often noisy, blow or thump. | |
noun (n.) An explosion, or the noise of one. | |
noun (n.) Bluster; brag; untruthful boasting; audacious exaggeration; an impudent lie; a bouncer. | |
noun (n.) A dogfish of Europe (Scyllium catulus). | |
verb (v. i.) To strike or thump, so as to rebound, or to make a sudden noise; a knock loudly. | |
verb (v. i.) To leap or spring suddenly or unceremoniously; to bound; as, she bounced into the room. | |
verb (v. i.) To boast; to talk big; to bluster. | |
verb (v. t.) To drive against anything suddenly and violently; to bump; to thump. | |
verb (v. t.) To cause to bound or rebound; sometimes, to toss. | |
verb (v. t.) To eject violently, as from a room; to discharge unceremoniously, as from employment. | |
verb (v. t.) To bully; to scold. | |
adverb (adv.) With a sudden leap; suddenly. |
breviloquence | noun (n.) A brief and pertinent mode of speaking. |
cadence | noun (n.) The act or state of declining or sinking. |
noun (n.) A fall of the voice in reading or speaking, especially at the end of a sentence. | |
noun (n.) A rhythmical modulation of the voice or of any sound; as, music of bells in cadence sweet. | |
noun (n.) Rhythmical flow of language, in prose or verse. | |
noun (n.) See Cadency. | |
noun (n.) Harmony and proportion in motions, as of a well-managed horse. | |
noun (n.) A uniform time and place in marching. | |
noun (n.) The close or fall of a strain; the point of rest, commonly reached by the immediate succession of the tonic to the dominant chord. | |
noun (n.) A cadenza, or closing embellishment; a pause before the end of a strain, which the performer may fill with a flight of fancy. | |
verb (v. t.) To regulate by musical measure. |
calescence | noun (n.) Growing warmth; increasing heat. |
calorescence | noun (n.) The conversion of obscure radiant heat into light; the transmutation of rays of heat into others of higher refrangibility. |
candescence | noun (n.) See Incandescence. |
centrifugence | noun (n.) The property or quality of being centrifugal. |
centripetence | noun (n.) Centripetency. |
circumference | noun (n.) The line that goes round or encompasses a circular figure; a periphery. |
noun (n.) A circle; anything circular. | |
noun (n.) The external surface of a sphere, or of any orbicular body. | |
verb (v. t.) To include in a circular space; to bound. |
circumfluence | noun (n.) A flowing round on all sides; an inclosing with a fluid. |
circumjacence | noun (n.) Condition of being circumjacent, or of bordering on every side. |
clarence | noun (n.) A close four-wheeled carriage, with one seat inside, and a seat for the driver. |
clemence | noun (n.) Clemency. |
coalescence | noun (n.) The act or state of growing together, as similar parts; the act of uniting by natural affinity or attraction; the state of being united; union; concretion. |
coexistence | noun (n.) Existence at the same time with another; -- contemporary existence. |
cognizance | noun (n.) Apprehension by the understanding; perception; observation. |
noun (n.) Recollection; recognition. | |
noun (n.) Jurisdiction, or the power given by law to hear and decide controversies. | |
noun (n.) The hearing a matter judicially. | |
noun (n.) An acknowledgment of a fine of lands and tenements or confession of a thing done. | |
noun (n.) A form of defense in the action of replevin, by which the defendant insists that the goods were lawfully taken, as a distress, by defendant, acting as servant for another. | |
noun (n.) The distinguishing mark worn by an armed knight, usually upon the helmet, and by his retainers and followers: Hence, in general, a badge worn by a retainer or dependent, to indicate the person or party to which he belonged; a token by which a thing may be known. |
cognoscence | noun (n.) Cognizance. |
coherence | noun (n.) Alt. of Coherency |
coincidence | noun (n.) The condition of occupying the same place in space; as, the coincidence of circles, surfaces, etc. |
noun (n.) The condition or fact of happening at the same time; as, the coincidence of the deaths of John Adams and Thomas Jefferson. | |
noun (n.) Exact correspondence in nature, character, result, circumstances, etc.; concurrence; agreement. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH VANCE (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (vanc) - Words That Begins with vanc:
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (van) - Words That Begins with van:
van | noun (n.) The front of an army; the first line or leading column; also, the front line or foremost division of a fleet, either in sailing or in battle. |
noun (n.) A shovel used in cleansing ore. | |
noun (n.) A light wagon, either covered or open, used by tradesmen and others fore the transportation of goods. | |
noun (n.) A large covered wagon for moving furniture, etc., also for conveying wild beasts, etc., for exhibition. | |
noun (n.) A close railway car for baggage. See the Note under Car, 2. | |
noun (n.) A fan or other contrivance, as a sieve, for winnowing grain. | |
noun (n.) A wing with which the air is beaten. | |
verb (v. t.) To wash or cleanse, as a small portion of ore, on a shovel. | |
verb (v. t.) To fan, or to cleanse by fanning; to winnow. |
vanadate | noun (n.) A salt of vanadic acid. |
vanadic | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or obtained from, vanadium; containing vanadium; specifically distinguished those compounds in which vanadium has a relatively higher valence as contrasted with the vanadious compounds; as, vanadic oxide. |
vanadinite | noun (n.) A mineral occurring in yellowish, and ruby-red hexagonal crystals. It consist of lead vanadate with a small proportion of lead chloride. |
vanadious | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or containing, vanadium; specifically, designating those compounds in which vanadium has a lower valence as contrasted with the vanadic compounds; as, vanadious acid. |
vanadite | noun (n.) A salt of vanadious acid, analogous to a nitrite or a phosphite. |
vanadium | noun (n.) A rare element of the nitrogen-phosphorus group, found combined, in vanadates, in certain minerals, and reduced as an infusible, grayish-white metallic powder. It is intermediate between the metals and the non-metals, having both basic and acid properties. Symbol V (or Vd, rarely). Atomic weight 51.2. |
vanadous | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to vanadium; obtained from vanadium; -- said of an acid containing one equivalent of vanadium and two of oxygen. |
vanadyl | noun (n.) The hypothetical radical VO, regarded as a characterized residue of certain vanadium compounds. |
vandal | noun (n.) One of a Teutonic race, formerly dwelling on the south shore of the Baltic, the most barbarous and fierce of the northern nations that plundered Rome in the 5th century, notorious for destroying the monuments of art and literature. |
noun (n.) Hence, one who willfully destroys or defaces any work of art or literature. | |
adjective (a.) Alt. of Vandalic |
vandalic | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the Vandals; resembling the Vandals in barbarism and destructiveness. |
vandalism | noun (n.) The spirit or conduct of the Vandals; ferocious cruelty; hostility to the arts and literature, or willful destruction or defacement of their monuments. |
vandyke | noun (n.) A picture by Vandyke. Also, a Vandyke collar, or a Vandyke edge. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the style of Vandyke the painter; used or represented by Vandyke. | |
verb (v. t.) fit or furnish with a Vandyke; to form with points or scallops like a Vandyke. |
vane | noun (n.) A contrivance attached to some elevated object for the purpose of showing which way the wind blows; a weathercock. It is usually a plate or strip of metal, or slip of wood, often cut into some fanciful form, and placed upon a perpendicular axis around which it moves freely. |
noun (n.) Any flat, extended surface attached to an axis and moved by the wind; as, the vane of a windmill; hence, a similar fixture of any form moved in or by water, air, or other fluid; as, the vane of a screw propeller, a fan blower, an anemometer, etc. | |
noun (n.) The rhachis and web of a feather taken together. | |
noun (n.) One of the sights of a compass, quadrant, etc. |
vanessa | noun (n.) Any one of numerous species of handsomely colored butterflies belonging to Vanessa and allied genera. Many of these species have the edges of the wings irregularly scalloped. |
vanessian | noun (n.) A vanessa. |
vanfess | noun (n.) A ditch on the outside of the counterscarp, usually full of water. |
vang | noun (n.) A rope to steady the peak of a gaff. |
vanglo | noun (n.) Benne (Sesamum orientale); also, its seeds; -- so called in the West Indies. |
vanguard | noun (n.) The troops who march in front of an army; the advance guard; the van. |
vanilla | noun (n.) A genus of climbing orchidaceous plants, natives of tropical America. |
noun (n.) The long podlike capsules of Vanilla planifolia, and V. claviculata, remarkable for their delicate and agreeable odor, for the volatile, odoriferous oil extracted from them; also, the flavoring extract made from the capsules, extensively used in confectionery, perfumery, etc. |
vanillate | noun (n.) A salt of vanillic acid. |
vanillic | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or derived from, vanilla or vanillin; resembling vanillin; specifically, designating an alcohol and an acid respectively, vanillin being the intermediate aldehyde. |
vanillin | noun (n.) A white crystalline aldehyde having a burning taste and characteristic odor of vanilla. It is extracted from vanilla pods, and is also obtained by the decomposition of coniferin, and by the oxidation of eugenol. |
vanilloes | noun (n. pl.) An inferior kind of vanilla, the pods of Vanilla Pompona. |
vanillyl | noun (n.) The hypothetical radical characteristic of vanillic alcohol. |
vaniloquence | noun (n.) Vain or foolish talk. |
vanishing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Vanish |
() a. & n. from Vanish, v. |
vanish | noun (n.) The brief terminal part of vowel or vocal element, differing more or less in quality from the main part; as, a as in ale ordinarily ends with a vanish of i as in ill, o as in old with a vanish of oo as in foot. |
verb (v. i.) To pass from a visible to an invisible state; to go out of sight; to disappear; to fade; as, vapor vanishes from the sight by being dissipated; a ship vanishes from the sight of spectators on land. | |
verb (v. i.) To be annihilated or lost; to pass away. |
vanishment | noun (n.) A vanishing. |
vanity | noun (n.) The quality or state of being vain; want of substance to satisfy desire; emptiness; unsubstantialness; unrealness; falsity. |
noun (n.) An inflation of mind upon slight grounds; empty pride inspired by an overweening conceit of one's personal attainments or decorations; an excessive desire for notice or approval; pride; ostentation; conceit. | |
noun (n.) That which is vain; anything empty, visionary, unreal, or unsubstantial; fruitless desire or effort; trifling labor productive of no good; empty pleasure; vain pursuit; idle show; unsubstantial enjoyment. | |
noun (n.) One of the established characters in the old moralities and puppet shows. See Morality, n., 5. |
vanjas | noun (n.) The Australian pied crow shrike (Strepera graculina). It is glossy bluish black, with the under tail coverts and the tips and bases of the tail feathers white. |
vanner | noun (n.) A machine for concentrating ore. See Frue vanner. |
vanning | noun (n.) A process by which ores are washed on a shovel, or in a vanner. |
vanquishing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Vanquish |
vanquish | noun (n.) A disease in sheep, in which they pine away. |
verb (v. t.) To conquer, overcome, or subdue in battle, as an enemy. | |
verb (v. t.) Hence, to defeat in any contest; to get the better of; to put down; to refute. |
vanquishable | adjective (a.) That may be vanquished. |
vanquisher | noun (n.) One who, or that which, vanquishes. |
vanquishment | noun (n.) The act of vanquishing, or the state of being vanquished. |
vansire | noun (n.) An ichneumon (Herpestes galera) native of Southern Africa and Madagascar. It is reddish brown or dark brown, grizzled with white. Called also vondsira, and marsh ichneumon. |
vantage | noun (n.) superior or more favorable situation or opportunity; gain; profit; advantage. |
noun (n.) The first point after deuce. | |
verb (v. t.) To profit; to aid. |
vantbrace | noun (n.) Alt. of Vantbrass |
vantbrass | noun (n.) Armor for the arm; vambrace. |
vanward | adjective (a.) Being on, or towards, the van, or front. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH VANCE:
English Words which starts with 'va' and ends with 'ce':
valance | noun (n.) Hanging drapery for a bed, couch, window, or the like, especially that which hangs around a bedstead, from the bed to the floor. |
noun (n.) The drooping edging of the lid of a trunk. which covers the joint when the lid is closed. | |
verb (v. t.) To furnish with a valance; to decorate with hangings or drapery. |
valence | noun (n.) The degree of combining power of an atom (or radical) as shown by the number of atoms of hydrogen (or of other monads, as chlorine, sodium, etc.) with which it will combine, or for which it can be substituted, or with which it can be compared; thus, an atom of hydrogen is a monad, and has a valence of one; the atoms of oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon are respectively dyads, triads, and tetrads, and have a valence respectively of two, three, and four. |
valiance | noun (n.) Alt. of Valiancy |
vambrace | noun (n.) The piece designed to protect the arm from the elbow to the wrist. |
variance | noun (n.) The quality or state of being variant; change of condition; variation. |
noun (n.) Difference that produce dispute or controversy; disagreement; dissension; discord; dispute; quarrel. | |
noun (n.) A disagreement or difference between two parts of the same legal proceeding, which, to be effectual, ought to agree, -- as between the writ and the declaration, or between the allegation and the proof. |