BASEEMA
First name BASEEMA's origin is Arabic. BASEEMA means "smiling". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with BASEEMA below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of baseema.(Brown names are of the same origin (Arabic) with BASEEMA and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming BASEEMA
FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES BASEEMA AS A WHOLE:
NAMES RHYMING WITH BASEEMA (According to last letters):
Rhyming Names According to Last 6 Letters (aseema) - Names That Ends with aseema:
Rhyming Names According to Last 5 Letters (seema) - Names That Ends with seema:
Rhyming Names According to Last 4 Letters (eema) - Names That Ends with eema:
neema saleema reema kareema haleemaRhyming Names According to Last 3 Letters (ema) - Names That Ends with ema:
rehema thema vema lema tessema ema menachema winema yarema lodema zulemaRhyming Names According to Last 2 Letters (ma) - Names That Ends with ma:
adama fatuma halima ifeoma mariama salama esma alima asima huma lama na'ima numa ulima mukarramma selma jurma aselma erma cyma desma neoma thelma kalama acima jemima carma kama ahisma karma padma ruma sarama sharama uma gulielma massima roma donoma kimama poloma shima adima juma usama chuma jorma soma adharma algoma alma aluma arama delma dharma dreama elma emma eskama faoiltiama fatima fidelma hilma jemma kahlima kalima karima karisma kuwanyauma lalima lodima lodyma myma nadhima nakoma nehama okimma oma paloma purisima salma saloma selima simaNAMES RHYMING WITH BASEEMA (According to first letters):
Rhyming Names According to First 6 Letters (baseem) - Names That Begins with baseem:
Rhyming Names According to First 5 Letters (basee) - Names That Begins with basee:
Rhyming Names According to First 4 Letters (base) - Names That Begins with base:
baselRhyming Names According to First 3 Letters (bas) - Names That Begins with bas:
basheera bashiga bashir bashira bashirah bashiri bashshar basil basile basilia basilio basilius basim basimah basmah bassam bassey bast baste bastet bastiaan bastienRhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (ba) - Names That Begins with ba:
baal bab baba babafemi babatunde babette babu babukar bac baccaus baccus backstere bacstair badal badawi bader badi'a badr badra badriyyah badru badu baduna baecere baen baerhloew baethan bagdemagus baghel baha baheera bahir bahira bahiti bahiya baibin baibre baigh bailee bailefour bailey bailintin baillidh bailoch bain bainbridge bainbrydge bairbre baird bairrfhionn bairrfhoinn bakari baker bakkir baladi baladie balasi balbina baldassare baldassario baldemar balder baldhart baldhere baldlice baldric baldrik balduin baldulf baldwin baldwyn baleigh balen balere balfour balgair balgaireNAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH BASEEMA:
First Names which starts with 'bas' and ends with 'ema':
First Names which starts with 'ba' and ends with 'ma':
bamaFirst Names which starts with 'b' and ends with 'a':
balinda balisarda bana baptista baraka barbara barbra barda barika barkarna barra barta bathilda bathsheba battista batula batya bautista beatha beatricia beatrisa becca beda behula bela belda belia belina belinda belisarda bella belva bemia bena benedetta benigna benita beomia beornia berangaria berdina berengaria bernadea bernadina bernarda bernetta bernia bernicia bernita berta bertha bertilda bertina bertuska beta betha bethanna bethea bethia bethsaida bethseda bethsheba betia bettina beula bha bhadraa bhagiratha bianca bibiana bidelia bidina bienvenida bilagaana binata binga binta birdena birkita bitya bixenta blanca blandina blasa blathma blyana boadicea boda bodiccea bodicea bodicia bohdana bonita bora borbala borsala boudicea boukra bozenaEnglish Words Rhyming BASEEMA
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES BASEEMA AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH BASEEMA (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 6 Letters (aseema) - English Words That Ends with aseema:
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (seema) - English Words That Ends with seema:
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (eema) - English Words That Ends with eema:
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (ema) - English Words That Ends with ema:
anathema | noun (n.) A ban or curse pronounced with religious solemnity by ecclesiastical authority, and accompanied by excommunication. Hence: Denunciation of anything as accursed. |
noun (n.) An imprecation; a curse; a malediction. | |
noun (n.) Any person or thing anathematized, or cursed by ecclesiastical authority. |
bema | noun (n.) A platform from which speakers addressed an assembly. |
noun (n.) That part of an early Christian church which was reserved for the higher clergy; the inner or eastern part of the chancel. | |
noun (n.) Erroneously: A pulpit. |
blastema | noun (n.) The structureless, protoplasmic tissue of the embryo; the primitive basis of an organ yet unformed, from which it grows. |
cytoblastema | noun (n.) See Protoplasm. |
diastema | noun (n.) A vacant space, or gap, esp. between teeth in a jaw. |
ecphonema | noun (n.) A breaking out with some interjectional particle. |
eczema | noun (n.) An inflammatory disease of the skin, characterized by the presence of redness and itching, an eruption of small vesicles, and the discharge of a watery exudation, which often dries up, leaving the skin covered with crusts; -- called also tetter, milk crust, and salt rheum. |
edema | noun (n.) Same as oedema. |
emphysema | noun (n.) A swelling produced by gas or air diffused in the cellular tissue. |
empyema | noun (n.) A collection of blood, pus, or other fluid, in some cavity of the body, especially that of the pleura. |
enema | noun (n.) An injection, or clyster, thrown into the rectum as a medicine, or to impart nourishment. |
epiblema | noun (n.) The epidermal cells of rootlets, specially adapted to absorb liquids. |
epichirema | noun (n.) A syllogism in which the proof of the major or minor premise, or both, is introduced with the premises themselves, and the conclusion is derived in the ordinary manner. |
epiphonema | noun (n.) An exclamatory sentence, or striking reflection, which sums up or concludes a discourse. |
epithema | noun (n.) A horny excrescence upon the beak of birds. |
erythema | noun (n.) A disease of the skin, in which a diffused inflammation forms rose-colored patches of variable size. |
exanthema | noun (n.) An efflorescence or discoloration of the skin; an eruption or breaking out, as in measles, smallpox, scarlatina, and the like diseases; -- sometimes limited to eruptions attended with fever. |
gymnolaema | noun (n. pl.) Alt. of Gymnolaemata |
helicotrema | noun (n.) The opening by which the two scalae communicate at the top of the cochlea of the ear. |
hyalonema | noun (n.) A genus of hexactinelline sponges, having a long stem composed of very long, slender, transparent, siliceous fibres twisted together like the strands of a color. The stem of the Japanese species (H. Sieboldii), called glass-rope, has long been in use as an ornament. See Glass-rope. |
myxoedema | noun (n.) A disease producing a peculiar cretinoid appearance of the face, slow speech, and dullness of intellect, and due to failure of the functions of the thyroid gland. |
nototrema | noun (n.) The pouched, or marsupial, frog of South America. |
oedema | noun (n.) A swelling from effusion of watery fluid in the cellular tissue beneath the skin or mucous membrance; dropsy of the subcutaneous cellular tissue. |
phylactolaema | noun (n. pl.) Alt. of Phylactolaemata |
phylactolema | noun (n. pl.) Alt. of Phylactolemata |
protonema | noun (n.) The primary growth from the spore of a moss, usually consisting of branching confervoid filaments, on any part of which stem and leaf buds may be developed. |
schema | noun (n.) An outline or image universally applicable to a general conception, under which it is likely to be presented to the mind; as, five dots in a line are a schema of the number five; a preceding and succeeding event are a schema of cause and effect. |
sclerema | noun (n.) Induration of the cellular tissue. |
seriema | noun (n.) A large South American bird (Dicholophus, / Cariama cristata) related to the cranes. It is often domesticated. Called also cariama. |
sorema | noun (n.) A heap of carpels belonging to one flower. |
ulema | noun (n.) A college or corporation in Turkey composed of the hierarchy, namely, the imams, or ministers of religion, the muftis, or doctors of law, and the cadis, or administrators of justice. |
noun (n.) A college or body composed of the hierarchy (the imams, muftis, and cadis). That of Turkey alone now has political power; its head is the sheik ul Islam. |
uzema | noun (n.) A Burman measure of twelve miles. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH BASEEMA (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 6 Letters (baseem) - Words That Begins with baseem:
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (basee) - Words That Begins with basee:
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (base) - Words That Begins with base:
base | noun (n.) The bottom of anything, considered as its support, or that on which something rests for support; the foundation; as, the base of a statue. |
noun (n.) Fig.: The fundamental or essential part of a thing; the essential principle; a groundwork. | |
noun (n.) The lower part of a wall, pier, or column, when treated as a separate feature, usually in projection, or especially ornamented. | |
noun (n.) The lower part of a complete architectural design, as of a monument; also, the lower part of any elaborate piece of furniture or decoration. | |
noun (n.) That extremity of a leaf, fruit, etc., at which it is attached to its support. | |
noun (n.) The positive, or non-acid component of a salt; a substance which, combined with an acid, neutralizes the latter and forms a salt; -- applied also to the hydroxides of the positive elements or radicals, and to certain organic bodies resembling them in their property of forming salts with acids. | |
noun (n.) The chief ingredient in a compound. | |
noun (n.) A substance used as a mordant. | |
noun (n.) The exterior side of the polygon, or that imaginary line which connects the salient angles of two adjacent bastions. | |
noun (n.) The line or surface constituting that part of a figure on which it is supposed to stand. | |
noun (n.) The number from which a mathematical table is constructed; as, the base of a system of logarithms. | |
noun (n.) A low, or deep, sound. (Mus.) (a) The lowest part; the deepest male voice. (b) One who sings, or the instrument which plays, base. | |
noun (n.) A place or tract of country, protected by fortifications, or by natural advantages, from which the operations of an army proceed, forward movements are made, supplies are furnished, etc. | |
noun (n.) The smallest kind of cannon. | |
noun (n.) That part of an organ by which it is attached to another more central organ. | |
noun (n.) The basal plane of a crystal. | |
noun (n.) The ground mass of a rock, especially if not distinctly crystalline. | |
noun (n.) The lower part of the field. See Escutcheon. | |
noun (n.) The housing of a horse. | |
noun (n.) A kind of skirt ( often of velvet or brocade, but sometimes of mailed armor) which hung from the middle to about the knees, or lower. | |
noun (n.) The lower part of a robe or petticoat. | |
noun (n.) An apron. | |
noun (n.) The point or line from which a start is made; a starting place or a goal in various games. | |
noun (n.) A line in a survey which, being accurately determined in length and position, serves as the origin from which to compute the distances and positions of any points or objects connected with it by a system of triangles. | |
noun (n.) A rustic play; -- called also prisoner's base, prison base, or bars. | |
noun (n.) Any one of the four bounds which mark the circuit of the infield. | |
noun (n.) To put on a base or basis; to lay the foundation of; to found, as an argument or conclusion; -- used with on or upon. | |
adjective (a.) Of little, or less than the usual, height; of low growth; as, base shrubs. | |
adjective (a.) Low in place or position. | |
adjective (a.) Of humble birth; or low degree; lowly; mean. | |
adjective (a.) Illegitimate by birth; bastard. | |
adjective (a.) Of little comparative value, as metal inferior to gold and silver, the precious metals. | |
adjective (a.) Alloyed with inferior metal; debased; as, base coin; base bullion. | |
adjective (a.) Morally low. Hence: Low-minded; unworthy; without dignity of sentiment; ignoble; mean; illiberal; menial; as, a base fellow; base motives; base occupations. | |
adjective (a.) Not classical or correct. | |
adjective (a.) Deep or grave in sound; as, the base tone of a violin. | |
adjective (a.) Not held by honorable service; as, a base estate, one held by services not honorable; held by villenage. Such a tenure is called base, or low, and the tenant, a base tenant. | |
adjective (a.) To abase; to let, or cast, down; to lower. | |
adjective (a.) To reduce the value of; to debase. |
baseball | noun (n.) A game of ball, so called from the bases or bounds ( four in number) which designate the circuit which each player must endeavor to make after striking the ball. |
noun (n.) The ball used in this game. |
baseboard | noun (n.) A board, or other woodwork, carried round the walls of a room and touching the floor, to form a base and protect the plastering; -- also called washboard (in England), mopboard, and scrubboard. |
baseborn | adjective (a.) Born out of wedlock. |
adjective (a.) Born of low parentage. | |
adjective (a.) Vile; mean. |
based | noun (n.) Wearing, or protected by, bases. |
adjective (a.) Having a base, or having as a base; supported; as, broad-based. | |
(imp. & p. p.) of Base |
baselard | noun (n.) A short sword or dagger, worn in the fifteenth century. |
baseless | adjective (a.) Without a base; having no foundation or support. |
basement | adjective (a.) The outer wall of the ground story of a building, or of a part of that story, when treated as a distinct substructure. ( See Base, n., 3 (a).) Hence: The rooms of a ground floor, collectively. |
baseness | noun (n.) The quality or condition of being base; degradation; vileness. |
basenet | noun (n.) See Bascinet. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (bas) - Words That Begins with bas:
basal | adjective (a.) Relating to, or forming, the base. |
basalt | noun (n.) A rock of igneous origin, consisting of augite and triclinic feldspar, with grains of magnetic or titanic iron, and also bottle-green particles of olivine frequently disseminated. |
noun (n.) An imitation, in pottery, of natural basalt; a kind of black porcelain. |
basaltic | adjective (a.) Pertaining to basalt; formed of, or containing, basalt; as basaltic lava. |
basaltiform | adjective (a.) In the form of basalt; columnar. |
basaltoid | adjective (a.) Formed like basalt; basaltiform. |
basan | noun (n.) Same as Basil, a sheepskin. |
basanite | noun (n.) Lydian stone, or black jasper, a variety of siliceous or flinty slate, of a grayish or bluish black color. It is employed to test the purity of gold, the amount of alloy being indicated by the color left on the stone when rubbed by the metal. |
basbleu | noun (n.) A bluestocking; a literary woman. |
bascinet | noun (n.) A light helmet, at first open, but later made with a visor. |
bascule | noun (n.) In mechanics an apparatus on the principle of the seesaw, in which one end rises as the other falls. |
basing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Base |
bashaw | noun (n.) A Turkish title of honor, now written pasha. See Pasha. |
noun (n.) Fig.: A magnate or grandee. | |
noun (n.) A very large siluroid fish (Leptops olivaris) of the Mississippi valley; -- also called goujon, mud cat, and yellow cat. |
bashful | adjective (a.) Abashed; daunted; dismayed. |
adjective (a.) Very modest, or modest excess; constitutionally disposed to shrink from public notice; indicating extreme or excessive modesty; shy; as, a bashful person, action, expression. |
bashfulness | noun (n.) The quality of being bashful. |
bashless | adjective (a.) Shameless; unblushing. |
bashyle | noun (n.) See Basyle. |
basic | adjective (a.) Relating to a base; performing the office of a base in a salt. |
adjective (a.) Having the base in excess, or the amount of the base atomically greater than that of the acid, or exceeding in proportion that of the related neutral salt. | |
adjective (a.) Apparently alkaline, as certain normal salts which exhibit alkaline reactions with test paper. | |
adjective (a.) Said of crystalline rocks which contain a relatively low percentage of silica, as basalt. |
basicerite | noun (n.) The second joint of the antennae of crustaceans. |
basicity | noun (n.) The quality or state of being a base. |
noun (n.) The power of an acid to unite with one or more atoms or equivalents of a base, as indicated by the number of replaceable hydrogen atoms contained in the acid. |
basidiospore | noun (n.) A spore borne by a basidium. |
basidium | noun (n.) A special oblong or pyriform cell, with slender branches, which bears the spores in that division of fungi called Basidiomycetes, of which the common mushroom is an example. |
basifier | noun (n.) That which converts into a salifiable base. |
basifugal | noun (n.) Tending or proceeding away from the base; as, a basifugal growth. |
basigynium | noun (n.) The pedicel on which the ovary of certain flowers, as the passion flower, is seated; a carpophore or thecaphore. |
basihyal | adjective (a.) Noting two small bones, forming the body of the inverted hyoid arch. |
basihyoid | noun (n.) The central tongue bone. |
basil | noun (n.) The slope or angle to which the cutting edge of a tool, as a plane, is ground. |
noun (n.) The name given to several aromatic herbs of the Mint family, but chiefly to the common or sweet basil (Ocymum basilicum), and the bush basil, or lesser basil (O. minimum), the leaves of which are used in cookery. The name is also given to several kinds of mountain mint (Pycnanthemum). | |
noun (n.) The skin of a sheep tanned with bark. | |
verb (v. t.) To grind or form the edge of to an angle. |
basiling | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Basil |
basilar | noun (n.) Alt. of Basilary |
basilary | noun (n.) Relating to, or situated at, the base. |
noun (n.) Lower; inferior; applied to impulses or springs of action. |
basilic | noun (n.) Basilica. |
adjective (a.) Alt. of Basilical |
basilical | adjective (a.) Royal; kingly; also, basilican. |
adjective (a.) Pertaining to certain parts, anciently supposed to have a specially important function in the animal economy, as the middle vein of the right arm. |
basilica | noun (n.) Originally, the place of a king; but afterward, an apartment provided in the houses of persons of importance, where assemblies were held for dispensing justice; and hence, any large hall used for this purpose. |
noun (n.) A building used by the Romans as a place of public meeting, with court rooms, etc., attached. | |
noun (n.) A church building of the earlier centuries of Christianity, the plan of which was taken from the basilica of the Romans. The name is still applied to some churches by way of honorary distinction. | |
noun (n.) A digest of the laws of Justinian, translated from the original Latin into Greek, by order of Basil I., in the ninth century. |
basilican | adjective (a.) Of, relating to, or resembling, a basilica; basilical. |
basilicok | noun (n.) The basilisk. |
basilicon | noun (n.) An ointment composed of wax, pitch, resin, and olive oil, lard, or other fatty substance. |
basilisk | noun (n.) A fabulous serpent, or dragon. The ancients alleged that its hissing would drive away all other serpents, and that its breath, and even its look, was fatal. See Cockatrice. |
noun (n.) A lizard of the genus Basiliscus, belonging to the family Iguanidae. | |
noun (n.) A large piece of ordnance, so called from its supposed resemblance to the serpent of that name, or from its size. |
basin | noun (n.) A hollow vessel or dish, to hold water for washing, and for various other uses. |
noun (n.) The quantity contained in a basin. | |
noun (n.) A hollow vessel, of various forms and materials, used in the arts or manufactures, as that used by glass grinders for forming concave glasses, by hatters for molding a hat into shape, etc. | |
noun (n.) A hollow place containing water, as a pond, a dock for ships, a little bay. | |
noun (n.) A circular or oval valley, or depression of the surface of the ground, the lowest part of which is generally occupied by a lake, or traversed by a river. | |
noun (n.) The entire tract of country drained by a river, or sloping towards a sea or lake. | |
noun (n.) An isolated or circumscribed formation, particularly where the strata dip inward, on all sides, toward a center; -- especially applied to the coal formations, called coal basins or coal fields. |
basined | adjective (a.) Inclosed in a basin. |
basinet | noun (n.) Same as Bascinet. |
basioccipital | noun (n.) The basioccipital bone. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the bone in the base of the cranium, frequently forming a part of the occipital in the adult, but usually distinct in the young. |
basion | noun (n.) The middle of the anterior margin of the great foramen of the skull. |
basipodite | noun (n.) The basal joint of the legs of Crustacea. |
basipterygium | noun (n.) A bar of cartilage at the base of the embryonic fins of some fishes. It develops into the metapterygium. |
basipterygoid | noun (a. & n.) Applied to a protuberance of the base of the sphenoid bone. |
basis | noun (n.) The foundation of anything; that on which a thing rests. |
noun (n.) The pedestal of a column, pillar, or statue. | |
noun (n.) The ground work the first or fundamental principle; that which supports. | |
noun (n.) The principal component part of a thing. |
basisolute | adjective (a.) Prolonged at the base, as certain leaves. |
basisphenoid | noun (n.) The basisphenoid bone. |
adjective (a.) Alt. of Basisphenoidal |
basisphenoidal | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to that part of the base of the cranium between the basioccipital and the presphenoid, which usually ossifies separately in the embryo or in the young, and becomes a part of the sphenoid in the adult. |
basking | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Bask |