First Names Rhyming PEDRINE
English Words Rhyming PEDRINE
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES PEDRƯNE AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH PEDRƯNE (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 6 Letters (edrine) - English Words That Ends with edrine:
cedrine | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to cedar or the cedar tree. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (drine) - English Words That Ends with drine:
alexandrine | noun (n.) A kind of verse consisting in English of twelve syllables. |
| adjective (a.) Belonging to Alexandria; Alexandrian. |
conhydrine | noun (n.) A vegetable alkaloid found with conine in the poison hemlock (Conium maculatum). It is a white crystalline substance, C8H17NO, easily convertible into conine. |
oleandrine | noun (n.) One of several alkaloids found in the leaves of the oleander. |
salamandrine | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or resembling, a salamander; enduring fire. |
scolopendrine | adjective (a.) Like or pertaining to the Scolopendra. |
yeldrine | noun (n.) The yellow-hammer; -- called also yeldrock, and yoldrin. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (rine) - English Words That Ends with rine:
acarine | adjective (a.) Of or caused by acari or mites; as, acarine diseases. |
accipitrine | adjective (a.) Like or belonging to the Accipitres; raptorial; hawklike. |
adulterine | noun (n.) An illegitimate child. |
| adjective (a.) Proceeding from adulterous intercourse. Hence: Spurious; without the support of law; illegal. |
alabastrine | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or like, alabaster; as alabastrine limbs. |
algerine | noun (n.) A native or one of the people of Algiers or Algeria. Also, a pirate. |
| adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to Algiers or Algeria. |
alpestrine | adjective (a.) Pertaining to the Alps, or other high mountains; as, Alpestrine diseases, etc. |
| adjective (a.) Growing on the elevated parts of mountains, but not above the timbe/ line; subalpine. |
amarine | noun (n.) A characteristic crystalline substance, obtained from oil of bitter almonds. |
anserine | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or resembling, a goose, or the skin of a goose. |
| adjective (a.) Pertaining to the Anseres. |
antifebrine | noun (n.) Acetanilide. |
antipyrine | noun (n.) An artificial alkaloid, believed to be efficient in abating fever. |
aquamarine | noun (n.) A transparent, pale green variety of beryl, used as a gem. See Beryl. |
atherine | noun (n.) A small marine fish of the family Atherinidae, having a silvery stripe along the sides. The European species (Atherina presbyter) is used as food. The American species (Menidia notata) is called silversides and sand smelt. See Silversides. |
austrine | noun (n.) Southern; southerly; austral. |
aventurine | noun (n.) A kind of glass, containing gold-colored spangles. It was produced in the first place by the accidental (par aventure) dropping of some brass filings into a pot of melted glass. |
| noun (n.) A variety of translucent quartz, spangled throughout with scales of yellow mica. |
azurine | noun (n.) The blue roach of Europe (Leuciscus caeruleus); -- so called from its color. |
| adjective (a.) Azure. |
bebeerine | noun (n.) Alt. of Bebirine |
bebirine | noun (n.) An alkaloid got from the bark of the bebeeru, or green heart of Guiana (Nectandra Rodioei). It is a tonic, antiperiodic, and febrifuge, and is used in medicine as a substitute for quinine. |
berberine | noun (n.) An alkaloid obtained, as a bitter, yellow substance, from the root of the barberry, gold thread, and other plants. |
bibirine | noun (n.) See Bebeerine. |
biforine | noun (n.) An oval sac or cell, found in the leaves of certain plants of the order Araceae. It has an opening at each end through which raphides, generated inside, are discharged. |
brine | noun (n.) Water saturated or strongly impregnated with salt; pickle; hence, any strong saline solution; also, the saline residue or strong mother liquor resulting from the evaporation of natural or artificial waters. |
| noun (n.) The ocean; the water of an ocean, sea, or salt lake. |
| noun (n.) Tears; -- so called from their saltness. |
| verb (v. t.) To steep or saturate in brine. |
| verb (v. t.) To sprinkle with salt or brine; as, to brine hay. |
butterine | noun (n.) A substance prepared from animal fat with some other ingredients intermixed, as an imitation of butter. |
banjorine | noun (n.) A kind of banjo, with a short neck, tuned a fourth higher than the common banjo; -- popularly so called. |
calabarine | noun (n.) An alkaloid resembling physostigmine and occurring with it in the calabar bean. |
calcarine | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or situated near, the calcar of the brain. |
cancrine | adjective (a.) Having the qualities of a crab; crablike. |
caprine | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to a goat; as, caprine gambols. |
chelerythrine | noun (n.) An alkaloidal principle obtained from the celandine, and named from the red color of its salts. It is a colorless crystalline substance, and acts as an acrid narcotic poison. It is identical with sanguinarine. |
chlorine | noun (n.) One of the elementary substances, commonly isolated as a greenish yellow gas, two and one half times as heavy as air, of an intensely disagreeable suffocating odor, and exceedingly poisonous. It is abundant in nature, the most important compound being common salt. It is powerful oxidizing, bleaching, and disinfecting agent. Symbol Cl. Atomic weight, 35.4. |
cholerine | noun (n.) The precursory symptoms of cholera. |
| noun (n.) The first stage of epidemic cholera. |
| noun (n.) A mild form of cholera. |
cinnabarine | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or resembling, cinnabar; consisting of cinnabar, or containing it; as, cinnabarine sand. |
citrine | noun (n.) A yellow, pellucid variety of quartz. |
| adjective (a.) Like a citron or lemon; of a lemon color; greenish yellow. |
colubrine | adjective (a.) like or related to snakes of the genus Coluber. |
| adjective (a.) Like a snake; cunning; crafty. |
conyrine | noun (n.) A blue, fluorescent, oily base (regarded as a derivative of pyridine), obtained from conine. |
curarine | noun (n.) A deadly alkaloid extracted from the curare poison and from the Strychnos toxifera. It is obtained in crystalline colorless salts. |
cyprine | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the cypress. |
| adjective (a.) Cyprinoid. |
dasyurine | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or like, the dasyures. |
daturine | noun (n.) Atropine; -- called also daturia and daturina. |
doctrine | noun (n.) Teaching; instruction. |
| noun (n.) That which is taught; what is held, put forth as true, and supported by a teacher, a school, or a sect; a principle or position, or the body of principles, in any branch of knowledge; any tenet or dogma; a principle of faith; as, the doctrine of atoms; the doctrine of chances. |
electrine | adjective (a.) Belonging to, or made of, amber. |
| adjective (a.) Made of electrum, an alloy used by the ancients. |
erythrine | noun (n.) A colorless crystalline substance, C20H22O10, extracted from certain lichens, as the various species of Rocella. It is a derivative of orsellinic acid. So called because of certain red compounds derived from it. Called also erythric acid. |
| noun (n.) See Erythrite, 2. |
escharine | adjective (a.) Like, or pertaining to, the genus Eschara, or family Escharidae. |
eserine | noun (n.) An alkaloid found in the Calabar bean, and the seed of Physostigma venenosum; physostigmine. It is used in ophthalmic surgery for its effect in contracting the pupil. |
estuarine | adjective (a.) Pertaining to an estuary; estuary. |
esurine | noun (n.) A medicine which provokes appetites, or causes hunger. |
| adjective (a.) Causing hunger; eating; corroding. |
ethmovomerine | noun (n.) Pertaining to the region of the vomer and the base of the ethmoid in the skull. |
euchlorine | noun (n.) A yellow or greenish yellow gas, first prepared by Davy, evolved from potassium chlorate and hydrochloric acid. It is supposed to consist of chlorine tetroxide with some free chlorine. |
eupatorin eupatorine | noun (n.) A principle or mixture of principles extracted from various species of Eupatorium. |
ferine | noun (n.) A wild beast; a beast of prey. |
| adjective (a.) Wild; untamed; savage; as, lions, tigers, wolves, and bears are ferine beasts. |
fibrine | adjective (a.) Belonging to the fibers of plants. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (ine) - English Words That Ends with ine:
abietine | noun (n.) A resinous obtained from Strasburg turpentine or Canada balsam. It is without taste or smell, is insoluble in water, but soluble in alcohol (especially at the boiling point), in strong acetic acid, and in ether. |
acacine | noun (n.) Gum arabic. |
acalycine | adjective (a.) Alt. of Acalysinous |
acanthine | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or resembling, the plant acanthus. |
acauline | adjective (a.) Same as Acaulescent. |
acervuline | adjective (a.) Resembling little heaps. |
acolyctine | noun (n.) An organic base, in the form of a white powder, obtained from Aconitum lycoctonum. |
aconitine | noun (n.) An intensely poisonous alkaloid, extracted from aconite. |
adamantine | adjective (a.) Made of adamant, or having the qualities of adamant; incapable of being broken, dissolved, or penetrated; as, adamantine bonds or chains. |
| adjective (a.) Like the diamond in hardness or luster. |
agatine | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or like, agate. |
alanine | noun (n.) A white crystalline base, C3H7NO2, derived from aldehyde ammonia. |
aldine | adjective (a.) An epithet applied to editions (chiefly of the classics) which proceeded from the press of Aldus Manitius, and his family, of Venice, for the most part in the 16th century and known by the sign of the anchor and the dolphin. The term has also been applied to certain elegant editions of English works. |
alkaline | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to an alkali or to alkalies; having the properties of an alkali. |
almandine | noun (n.) The common red variety of garnet. |
almondine | noun (n.) See Almandine |
alphonsine | adjective (a.) Of or relating to Alphonso X., the Wise, King of Castile (1252-1284). |
alpine | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the Alps, or to any lofty mountain; as, Alpine snows; Alpine plants. |
| adjective (a.) Like the Alps; lofty. |
altheine | noun (n.) Asparagine. |
alumine | noun (n.) Alumina. |
alvine | adjective (a.) Of, from, in, or pertaining to, the belly or the intestines; as, alvine discharges; alvine concretions. |
amandine | noun (n.) The vegetable casein of almonds. |
| noun (n.) A kind of cold cream prepared from almonds, for chapped hands, etc. |
amanitine | noun (n.) The poisonous principle of some fungi. |
amaranthine | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to amaranth. |
| adjective (a.) Unfading, as the poetic amaranth; undying. |
| adjective (a.) Of a purplish color. |
amethystine | adjective (a.) Resembling amethyst, especially in color; bluish violet. |
| adjective (a.) Composed of, or containing, amethyst. |
amine | noun (n.) One of a class of strongly basic substances derived from ammonia by replacement of one or more hydrogen atoms by a basic atom or radical. |
amygdaline | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or resembling, almonds. |
anatine | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the ducks; ducklike. |
andesine | noun (n.) A kind of triclinic feldspar found in the Andes. |
andine | adjective (a.) Andean; as, Andine flora. |
angevine | noun (n.) A native of Anjou. |
| adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to Anjou in France. |
anguine | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or resembling, a snake or serpent. |
aniline | noun (n.) An organic base belonging to the phenylamines. It may be regarded as ammonia in which one hydrogen atom has been replaced by the radical phenyl. It is a colorless, oily liquid, originally obtained from indigo by distillation, but now largely manufactured from coal tar or nitrobenzene as a base from which many brilliant dyes are made. |
| adjective (a.) Made from, or of the nature of, aniline. |
animalculine | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or resembling, animalcules. |
annotine | noun (n.) A bird one year old, or that has once molted. |
antalkaline | noun (n.) Anything that neutralizes, or that counteracts an alkaline tendency in the system. |
| adjective (a.) Of power to counteract alkalies. |
antilopine | adjective (a.) Of or relating to the antelope. |
antitoxine | noun (n.) A substance (sometimes the product of a specific micro-organism and sometimes naturally present in the blood or tissues of an animal), capable of producing immunity from certain diseases, or of counteracting the poisonous effects of pathogenic bacteria. |
apennine | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or designating, the Apennines, a chain of mountains extending through Italy. |
apomorphine | noun (n.) A crystalline alkaloid obtained from morphia. It is a powerful emetic. |
aquiline | adjective (a.) Belonging to or like an eagle. |
| adjective (a.) Curving; hooked; prominent, like the beak of an eagle; -- applied particularly to the nose |
ardassine | noun (n.) A very fine sort of Persian silk. |
argentine | noun (n.) A siliceous variety of calcite, or carbonate of lime, having a silvery-white, pearly luster, and a waving or curved lamellar structure. |
| noun (n.) White metal coated with silver. |
| noun (n.) A fish of Europe (Maurolicus Pennantii) with silvery scales. The name is also applied to various fishes of the genus Argentina. |
| noun (n.) A citizen of the Argentine Republic. |
| adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or resembling, silver; made of, or sounding like, silver; silvery. |
| adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the Argentine Republic in South America. |
aricine | noun (n.) An alkaloid, first found in white cinchona bark. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH PEDRƯNE (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 6 Letters (pedrin) - Words That Begins with pedrin:
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (pedri) - Words That Begins with pedri:
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (pedr) - Words That Begins with pedr:
pedregal | noun (n.) A lava field. |
pedrail | noun (n.) A device intended to replace the wheel of a self-propelled vehicle for use on rough roads and to approximate to the smoothness in running of a wheel on a metal track. The tread consists of a number of rubber shod feet which are connected by ball-and-socket joints to the ends of sliding spokes. Each spoke has attached to it a small roller which in its turn runs under a short pivoted rail controlled by a powerful set of springs. This arrangement permits the feet to accomodate themselves to obstacles even such as steps or stairs. The pedrail was invented by one B. J. Diplock of London, Eng. |
| noun (n.) A vehicle, as a traction engine, having such pedrails. |
pedro | noun (n.) The five of trumps in certain varieties of auction pitch. |
| noun (n.) A variety of auction pitch in which the five of trumps counts five. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (ped) - Words That Begins with ped:
ped | noun (n.) A basket; a hammer; a pannier. |
pedage | noun (n.) A toll or tax paid by passengers, entitling them to safe-conduct and protection. |
pedagog | noun (n.) Pedagogue. |
pedagogic | adjective (a.) See Pedagogics. |
| adjective (a.) Alt. of Pedagogical |
pedagogical | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to a pedagogue; suited to, or characteristic of, a pedagogue. |
pedagogics | noun (n.) The science or art of teaching; the principles and rules of teaching; pedagogy. |
pedagogism | noun (n.) The system, occupation, character, or manner of pedagogues. |
pedagogue | noun (n.) A slave who led his master's children to school, and had the charge of them generally. |
| noun (n.) A teacher of children; one whose occupation is to teach the young; a schoolmaster. |
| noun (n.) One who by teaching has become formal, positive, or pedantic in his ways; one who has the manner of a schoolmaster; a pedant. |
| verb (v. t.) To play the pedagogue toward. |
pedagogy | noun (n.) Pedagogics; pedagogism. |
pedal | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the foot, or to feet, literally or figuratively; specifically (Zool.), pertaining to the foot of a mollusk; as, the pedal ganglion. |
| adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to a pedal; having pedals. |
| adjective (a.) A lever or key acted on by the foot, as in the pianoforte to raise the dampers, or in the organ to open and close certain pipes; a treadle, as in a lathe or a bicycle. |
| adjective (a.) A pedal curve or surface. |
pedalian | adjective (a.) Relating to the foot, or to a metrical foot; pedal. |
pedality | noun (n.) The act of measuring by paces. |
pedaneous | adjective (a.) Going on foot; pedestrian. |
pedant | noun (n.) A schoolmaster; a pedagogue. |
| noun (n.) One who puts on an air of learning; one who makes a vain display of learning; a pretender to superior knowledge. |
pedantic | adjective (a.) Alt. of Pedantical |
pedantical | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to a pedant; characteristic of, or resembling, a pedant; ostentatious of learning; as, a pedantic writer; a pedantic description; a pedantical affectation. |
pedantism | noun (n.) The office, disposition, or act of a pedant; pedantry. |
pedantocracy | noun (n.) The sway of pedants. |
pedantry | noun (n.) The act, character, or manners of a pedant; vain ostentation of learning. |
pedanty | noun (n.) An assembly or clique of pedants. |
pedarian | noun (n.) One of a class eligible to the office of senator, but not yet chosen, who could sit and speak in the senate, but could not vote; -- so called because he might indicate his opinion by walking over to the side of the party he favored when a vote was taken. |
pedary | noun (n.) A sandal. |
pedata | noun (n. pl.) An order of holothurians, including those that have ambulacral suckers, or feet, and an internal gill. |
pedate | adjective (a.) Palmate, with the lateral lobes cleft into two or more segments; -- said of a leaf. |
pedatifid | adjective (a.) Cleft in a pedate manner, but having the lobes distinctly connected at the base; -- said of a leaf. |
peddling | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Peddle |
| adjective (a.) Hawking; acting as a peddler. |
| adjective (a.) Petty; insignificant. |
peddler | noun (n.) One who peddles; a traveling trader; one who travels about, retailing small wares; a hawker. |
peddlery | noun (n.) The trade, or the goods, of a peddler; hawking; small retail business, like that of a peddler. |
| noun (n.) Trifling; trickery. |
pederast | noun (n.) One guilty of pederasty; a sodomite. |
pederastic | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to pederasty. |
pederasty | noun (n.) The crime against nature; sodomy. |
pederero | noun (n.) A term formerly applied to a short piece of chambered ordnance. |
pedesis | noun (n.) Same as Brownian movement, under Brownian. |
pedestal | noun (n.) The base or foot of a column, statue, vase, lamp, or the like; the part on which an upright work stands. It consists of three parts, the base, the die or dado, and the cornice or surbase molding. See Illust. of Column. |
| noun (n.) A casting secured to the frame of a truck and forming a jaw for holding a journal box. |
| noun (n.) A pillow block; a low housing. |
| noun (n.) An iron socket, or support, for the foot of a brace at the end of a truss where it rests on a pier. |
pedestaled | adjective (a.) Placed on, or supported by, a pedestal; figuratively, exalted. |
pedestrial | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the feet; employing the foot or feet. |
pedestrian | noun (n.) A walker; one who journeys on foot; a foot traveler; specif., a professional walker or runner. |
| adjective (a.) Going on foot; performed on foot; as, a pedestrian journey. |
pedestrianism | noun (n.) The act, art, or practice of a pedestrian; walking or running; traveling or racing on foot. |
pedestrianizing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Pedestrianize |
pedestrious | adjective (a.) Going on foot; not winged. |
pedetentous | adjective (a.) Proceeding step by step; advancing cautiously. |
pedial | adjective (a.) Pertaining to the foot, or to any organ called a foot; pedal. |
pedicel | noun (n.) A stalk which supports one flower or fruit, whether solitary or one of many ultimate divisions of a common peduncle. See Peduncle, and Illust. of Flower. |
| noun (n.) A slender support of any special organ, as that of a capsule in mosses, an air vesicle in algae, or a sporangium in ferns. |
| noun (n.) A slender stem by which certain of the lower animals or their eggs are attached. See Illust. of Aphis lion. |
| noun (n.) The ventral part of each side of the neural arch connecting with the centrum of a vertebra. |
| noun (n.) An outgrowth of the frontal bones, which supports the antlers or horns in deer and allied animals. |
pediceled | adjective (a.) Pedicellate. |
pedicellaria | noun (n.) A peculiar forcepslike organ which occurs in large numbers upon starfishes and echini. Those of starfishes have two movable jaws, or blades, and are usually nearly, or quite, sessile; those of echini usually have three jaws and a pedicel. See Illustration in Appendix. |
pedicellate | adjective (a.) Having a pedicel; supported by a pedicel. |
pedicellina | noun (n.) A genus of Bryozoa, of the order Entoprocta, having a bell-shaped body supported on a slender pedicel. See Illust. under Entoprocta. |
pedicle | noun (n.) Same as Pedicel. |
pedicular | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to lice; having the lousy distemper (phthiriasis); lousy. |
pediculate | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the Pediculati. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH PEDRƯNE:
English Words which starts with 'ped' and ends with 'ine':
English Words which starts with 'pe' and ends with 'ne':
pearlstone | noun (n.) A glassy volcanic rock of a grayish color and pearly luster, often having a spherulitic concretionary structure due to the curved cracks produced by contraction in cooling. See Illust. under Perlitic. |
peastone | noun (n.) Pisolite. |
pebrine | noun (n.) An epidemic disease of the silkworm, characterized by the presence of minute vibratory corpuscles in the blood. |
pedimane | noun (n.) A pedimanous marsupial; an opossum. |
pelegrine | adjective (a.) See Peregrine. |
pelerine | noun (n.) A woman's cape; especially, a fur cape that is longer in front than behind. |
penduline | noun (n.) A European titmouse (Parus, / Aegithalus, pendulinus). It is noted for its elegant pendulous purselike nest, made of the down of willow trees and lined with feathers. |
pentadecane | noun (n.) A hydrocarbon of the paraffin series, (C15H32) found in petroleum, tar oil, etc., and obtained as a colorless liquid; -- so called from the fifteen carbon atoms in the molecule. |
pentamethylene | noun (n.) A hypothetical hydrocarbon, C5H10, metameric with the amylenes, and the nucleus of a large number of derivatives; -- so named because regarded as composed of five methylene residues. Cf. Trimethylene, and Tetramethylene. |
pentane | noun (n.) Any one of the three metameric hydrocarbons, C5H12, of the methane or paraffin series. They are colorless, volatile liquids, two of which occur in petroleum. So called because of the five carbon atoms in the molecule. |
pentene | noun (n.) Same as Amylene. |
pentine | noun (n.) An unsaturated hydrocarbon, C5H8, of the acetylene series. Same as Valerylene. |
pentone | noun (n.) Same as Valylene. |
peperine | noun (n.) Alt. of Peperino |
peptone | noun (n.) The soluble and diffusible substance or substances into which albuminous portions of the food are transformed by the action of the gastric and pancreatic juices. Peptones are also formed from albuminous matter by the action of boiling water and boiling dilute acids. |
| noun (n.) Collectively, in a broader sense, all the products resulting from the solution of albuminous matter in either gastric or pancreatic juice. In this case, however, intermediate products (albumose bodies), such as antialbumose, hemialbumose, etc., are mixed with the true peptones. Also termed albuminose. |
peptotoxine | noun (n.) A toxic alkaloid found occasionally associated with the peptones formed from fibrin by pepsinhydrochloric acid. |
percaline | noun (n.) A fine kind of French cotton goods, usually of one color. |
| noun (n.) A fine kind of cotton goods, usually of one color, and with a glossy surface, -- much use for linings. |
perdicine | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the family Perdicidae, or partridges. |
peregrine | noun (n.) The peregrine falcon. |
| adjective (a.) Foreign; not native; extrinsic or from without; exotic. |
perigone | noun (n.) Any organ inclosing the essential organs of a flower; a perianth. |
| noun (n.) In mosses, the involucral bracts of a male flower. |
| noun (n.) A sac which surrounds the generative bodies in the gonophore of a hydroid. |
periuterine | adjective (a.) Surrounding the uterus. |
perivitelline | adjective (a.) Situated around the vitellus, or between the vitellus and zona pellucida of an ovum. |
pesane | noun (n.) See Pusane. |
petaline | adjective (a.) Pertaining to a petal; attached to, or resembling, a petal. |
petrine | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to St.Peter; as, the Petrine Epistles. |
petroline | noun (n.) A paraffin obtained from petroleum from Rangoon in India, and practically identical with ordinary paraffin. |
petrostearine | noun (n.) A solid unctuous material, of which candles are made. |
persienne | noun (n.) Properly, printed calico, whether Oriental or of fanciful design with flowers, etc., in Western work. Hence, as extended in English, material of a similar character. |