BORA
First name BORA's origin is Other. BORA means "hungarian forms of barbara (stranger)". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with BORA below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of bora.(Brown names are of the same origin (Other) with BORA and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming BORA
FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES BORA AS A WHOLE:
deborah tabora borak raedbora deboraNAMES RHYMING WITH BORA (According to last letters):
Rhyming Names According to Last 3 Letters (ora) - Names That Ends with ora:
aurora adora senora thora dora fedora isadora madora musidora pandora pheodora theodora theora zudora teodora teadora aghamora aldora alora amora annora anora avonmora cora delora devora dinora eilinora eldora eleadora eleanora eleonora eleora elnora elora feodora guanhumora honora isidora lenora leonora liora lora mora nicanora nora ora pastora salbatora salvadora salvatora sanora talora xalbadora xalvadora yoora zamora zemora zipora wendlesora elenora zippora eliora derora phedora musadora medora hannelora onora orzora sipporaRhyming Names According to Last 2 Letters (ra) - Names That Ends with ra:
asura azmera chinara efra iyangura japera katura nadra sanura tandra zuhura estra moira soumra adra aludra alzubra badra bahira bushra johara nasira noura samira thara' yusra gadara chamorra denderaNAMES RHYMING WITH BORA (According to first letters):
Rhyming Names According to First 3 Letters (bor) - Names That Begins with bor:
borbala bordan borden boreas borre bors borsala bortRhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (bo) - Names That Begins with bo:
boadhagh boadicea boarte boas boaz bob bobbi bobbie bobby bobo boc bocleah bocley boda bodaway boden bodgan bodi bodiccea bodicea bodicia bodil bodwyn body boell boethius bofind bogart bogdan boghos bogohardt bohannon bohdan bohdana bohort bohous bohumil bokhari bolaji boldizsar bolton bomani bond bondig bonie boniface bonifacio bonifacius bonifaco bonita bonnar bonni bonnibelle bonnie bonnie-jo bonny bonny-jean bonny-lee boone booth boothe bosworth botan botewolf both bothain bothan bothe botolf botolff botwolf boudicea boukra boulad boulboul boulus bourkan bourke bourn bourne bow bowden bowdyn bowen bowie bowyn boyce boyd boyden boyne boynton bozenaNAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH BORA:
First Names which starts with 'b' and ends with 'a':
baba badi'a baduna baha baheera bahiya balbina balinda balisarda bama bana baptista baraka barbara barbra barda barika barkarna barra barta baseema basheera bashiga bashira basilia 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 braEnglish Words Rhyming BORA
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES BORA AS A WHOLE:
aboral | adjective (a.) Situated opposite to, or away from, the mouth. |
alborak | noun (n.) The imaginary milk-white animal on which Mohammed was said to have been carried up to heaven; a white mule. |
arborary | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to trees; arboreal. |
arborator | noun (n.) One who plants or who prunes trees. |
borable | adjective (a.) Capable of being bored. |
borachte | noun (n.) A large leather bottle for liquors, etc., made of the skin of a goat or other animal. Hence: A drunkard. |
boracic | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or produced from, borax; containing boron; boric; as, boracic acid. |
boracite | noun (n.) A mineral of a white or gray color occurring massive and in isometric crystals; in composition it is a magnesium borate with magnesium chloride. |
boracous | adjective (a.) Relating to, or obtained from, borax; containing borax. |
borage | noun (n.) A mucilaginous plant of the genus Borago (B. officinalis), which is used, esp. in France, as a demulcent and diaphoretic. |
boragewort | noun (n.) Plant of the Borage family. |
boraginaceous | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or resembling, a family of plants (Boraginaceae) which includes the borage, heliotrope, beggar's lice, and many pestiferous plants. |
boragineous | adjective (a.) Relating to the Borage tribe; boraginaceous. |
boramez | noun (n.) See Barometz. |
borate | noun (n.) A salt formed by the combination of boric acid with a base or positive radical. |
borax | noun (n.) A white or gray crystalline salt, with a slight alkaline taste, used as a flux, in soldering metals, making enamels, fixing colors on porcelain, and as a soap. It occurs native in certain mineral springs, and is made from the boric acid of hot springs in Tuscany. It was originally obtained from a lake in Thibet, and was sent to Europe under the name of tincal. Borax is a pyroborate or tetraborate of sodium, Na2B4O7.10H2O. |
collaborateur | noun (n.) See Collaborator. |
collaboration | noun (n.) The act of working together; united labor. |
collaborator | noun (n.) An associate in labor, especially in literary or scientific labor. |
corroborant | noun (n.) Anything which gives strength or support; a tonic. |
adjective (a.) Strengthening; supporting; corroborating. |
corroborating | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Corroborate |
corroborate | adjective (a.) Corroborated. |
verb (v. t.) To make strong, or to give additional strength to; to strengthen. | |
verb (v. t.) To make more certain; to confirm; to establish. |
corroboration | noun (n.) The act of corroborating, strengthening, or confirming; addition of strength; confirmation; as, the corroboration of an argument, or of information. |
noun (n.) That which corroborates. |
corroborative | noun (n.) A medicine that strengthens; a corroborant. |
adjective (a.) Tending to strengthen of confirm. |
corroboratory | adjective (a.) Tending to strengthen; corroborative; as, corroboratory facts. |
elaborate | adjective (a.) Wrought with labor; finished with great care; studied; executed with exactness or painstaking; as, an elaborate discourse; an elaborate performance; elaborate research. |
verb (v. t.) To produce with labor | |
verb (v. t.) To perfect with painstaking; to improve or refine with labor and study, or by successive operations; as, to elaborate a painting or a literary work. |
elaborating | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Elaborate |
elaboration | noun (n.) The act or process of producing or refining with labor; improvement by successive operations; refinement. |
noun (n.) The natural process of formation or assimilation, performed by the living organs in animals and vegetables, by which a crude substance is changed into something of a higher order; as, the elaboration of food into chyme; the elaboration of chyle, or sap, or tissues. |
elaborative | adjective (a.) Serving or tending to elaborate; constructing with labor and minute attention to details. |
elaborator | noun (n.) One who, or that which, elaborates. |
elaboratory | noun (n.) A laboratory. |
adjective (a.) Tending to elaborate. |
fluoborate | noun (n.) A salt of fluoboric acid; a fluoboride. |
harborage | noun (n.) Shelter; entertainment. |
inelaborate | adjective (a.) Not elaborate; not wrought with care; unpolished; crude; unfinished. |
interarboration | noun (n.) The interweaving of branches of trees. |
jaborandi | noun (n.) The native name of a South American rutaceous shrub (Pilocarpus pennatifolius). The leaves are used in medicine as an diaphoretic and sialogogue. |
laborant | noun (n.) A chemist. |
laboratory | noun (n.) The workroom of a chemist; also, a place devoted to experiments in any branch of natural science; as, a chemical, physical, or biological laboratory. Hence, by extension, a place where something is prepared, or some operation is performed; as, the liver is the laboratory of the bile. |
pyroborate | noun (n.) A salt of pyroboric acid. |
roborant | noun (n.) A strengthening medicine; a tonic. |
adjective (a.) Strengthening. |
roboration | noun (n.) The act of strengthening. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH BORA (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (ora) - English Words That Ends with ora:
agora | noun (n.) An assembly; hence, the place of assembly, especially the market place, in an ancient Greek city. |
amphora | noun (n.) Among the ancients, a two-handled vessel, tapering at the bottom, used for holding wine, oil, etc. |
anaphora | noun (n.) A repetition of a word or of words at the beginning of two or more successive clauses. |
angora | noun (n.) A city of Asia Minor (or Anatolia) which has given its name to a goat, a cat, etc. |
aplacophora | noun (n. pl.) A division of Amphineura in which the body is naked or covered with slender spines or setae, but is without shelly plates. |
aurora | noun (n.) The rising light of the morning; the dawn of day; the redness of the sky just before the sun rises. |
noun (n.) The rise, dawn, or beginning. | |
noun (n.) The Roman personification of the dawn of day; the goddess of the morning. The poets represented her a rising out of the ocean, in a chariot, with rosy fingers dropping gentle dew. | |
noun (n.) A species of crowfoot. | |
noun (n.) The aurora borealis or aurora australis (northern or southern lights). |
basommatophora | noun (n. pl.) A group of Pulmonifera having the eyes at the base of the tentacles, including the common pond snails. |
caracora | noun (n.) A light vessel or proa used by the people of Borneo, etc., and by the Dutch in the East Indies. |
carnivora | noun (n. pl.) An order of Mammallia including the lion, tiger, wolf bear, seal, etc. They are adapted by their structure to feed upon flesh, though some of them, as the bears, also eat vegetable food. The teeth are large and sharp, suitable for cutting flesh, and the jaws powerful. |
cephalophora | noun (n. pl.) The cephalata. |
cora | noun (n.) The Arabian gazelle (Gazella Arabica), found from persia to North Africa. |
ctenophora | noun (n. pl.) A class of Coelenterata, commonly ellipsoidal in shape, swimming by means of eight longitudinal rows of paddles. The separate paddles somewhat resemble combs. |
discophora | noun (n. pl.) A division of acalephs or jellyfishes, including most of the large disklike species. |
doryphora | noun (n.) A genus of plant-eating beetles, including the potato beetle. See Potato beetle. |
diaspora | noun (n.) Lit., "Dispersion." -- applied collectively: (a) To those Jews who, after the Exile, were scattered through the Old World, and afterwards to Jewish Christians living among heathen. Cf. James i. 1. (b) By extension, to Christians isolated from their own communion, as among the Moravians to those living, usually as missionaries, outside of the parent congregation. |
epanaphora | noun (n.) Same as Anaphora. |
epiphora | noun (n.) The watery eye; a disease in which the tears accumulate in the eye, and trickle over the cheek. |
noun (n.) The emphatic repetition of a word or phrase, at the end of several sentences or stanzas. |
flora | noun (n.) The goddess of flowers and spring. |
noun (n.) The complete system of vegetable species growing without cultivation in a given locality, region, or period; a list or description of, or treatise on, such plants. |
frugivora | noun (n. pl.) The fruit bate; a group of the Cheiroptera, comprising the bats which live on fruits. See Eruit bat, under Fruit. |
heliopora | noun (n.) An East Indian stony coral now known to belong to the Alcyonaria; -- called also blue coral. |
herbivora | noun (n. pl.) An extensive division of Mammalia. It formerly included the Proboscidea, Hyracoidea, Perissodactyla, and Artiodactyla, but by later writers it is generally restricted to the two latter groups (Ungulata). They feed almost exclusively upon vegetation. |
hydrophora | noun (n. pl.) The Hydroidea. |
insectivora | noun (n. pl.) An order of mammals which feed principally upon insects. |
noun (n. pl.) A division of the Cheiroptera, including the common or insect-eating bats. |
madrepora | noun (n.) A genus of reef corals abundant in tropical seas. It includes than one hundred and fifty species, most of which are elegantly branched. |
mandragora | noun (n.) A genus of plants; the mandrake. See Mandrake, 1. |
masora | noun (n.) A Jewish critical work on the text of the Hebrew Scriptures, composed by several learned rabbis of the school of Tiberias, in the eighth and ninth centuries. |
massora | noun (n.) Same as Masora. |
millepora | noun (n.) A genus of Hydrocorallia, which includes the millipores. |
mora | noun (n.) A game of guessing the number of fingers extended in a quick movement of the hand, -- much played by Italians of the lower classes. |
noun (n.) A leguminous tree of Guiana and Trinidad (Dimorphandra excelsa); also, its timber, used in shipbuilding and making furniture. | |
noun (n.) Delay; esp., culpable delay; postponement. |
nematophora | noun (n. pl.) Same as Coelenterata. |
odontophora | noun (n.pl.) Same as Cephalophora. |
omnivora | noun (n. pl.) A group of ungulate mammals including the hog and the hippopotamus. The term is also sometimes applied to the bears, and to certain passerine birds. |
onychophora | noun (n. pl.) Malacopoda. |
ora | noun (n.) A money of account among the Anglo-Saxons, valued, in the Domesday Book, at twenty pence sterling. |
(pl. ) of Os |
pandora | noun (n.) A beautiful woman (all-gifted), whom Jupiter caused Vulcan to make out of clay in order to punish the human race, because Prometheus had stolen the fire from heaven. Jupiter gave Pandora a box containing all human ills, which, when the box was opened, escaped and spread over the earth. Hope alone remained in the box. Another version makes the box contain all the blessings of the gods, which were lost to men when Pandora opened it. |
noun (n.) A genus of marine bivalves, in which one valve is flat, the other convex. |
passiflora | noun (n.) A genus of plants, including the passion flower. It is the type of the order Passifloreae, which includes about nineteen genera and two hundred and fifty species. |
pecora | noun (n. pl.) An extensive division of ruminants, including the antelopes, deer, and cattle. |
placophora | noun (n. pl.) A division of gastropod Mollusca, including the chitons. The back is covered by eight shelly plates. Called also Polyplacophora. See Illust. under Chiton, and Isopleura. |
plethora | noun (n.) Overfullness; especially, excessive fullness of the blood vessels; repletion; that state of the blood vessels or of the system when the blood exceeds a healthy standard in quantity; hyperaemia; -- opposed to anaemia. |
noun (n.) State of being overfull; excess; superabundance. |
pneumonophora | noun (n. pl.) The division of Siphonophora which includes the Physalia and allied genera; -- called also Pneumatophorae. |
pneumophora | noun (n. pl.) A division of holothurians having an internal gill, or respiratory tree. |
polyplacophora | noun (n. pl.) See Placophora. |
psora | noun (n.) A cutaneous disease; especially, the itch. |
pupivora | noun (n. pl.) A group of parasitic Hymenoptera, including the ichneumon flies, which destroy the larvae and pupae of insects. |
remora | noun (n.) Delay; obstacle; hindrance. |
noun (n.) Any one of several species of fishes belonging to Echeneis, Remora, and allied genera. Called also sucking fish. | |
noun (n.) An instrument formerly in use, intended to retain parts in their places. |
retinophora | noun (n.) One of group of two to four united cells which occupy the axial part of the ocelli, or ommatidia, of the eyes of invertebrates, and contain the terminal nerve fibrillae. See Illust. under Ommatidium. |
rhabdophora | noun (n. pl.) An extinct division of Hydrozoa which includes the graptolities. |
rhizophora | noun (n.) A genus of trees including the mangrove. See Mangrove. |
rhynchophora | noun (n. pl.) A group of Coleoptera having a snoutlike head; the snout beetles, curculios, or weevils. |
se–ora | noun (n.) A Spanish title of courtesy given to a lady; Mrs.; Madam; also, a lady. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH BORA (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (bor) - Words That Begins with bor:
borborygm | noun (n.) A rumbling or gurgling noise produced by wind in the bowels. |
bord | noun (n.) A board; a table. |
noun (n.) The face of coal parallel to the natural fissures. | |
noun (n.) See Bourd. |
bordage | noun (n.) The base or servile tenure by which a bordar held his cottage. |
bordar | noun (n.) A villein who rendered menial service for his cottage; a cottier. |
bordeaux | noun (n.) A claret wine from Bordeaux. |
adjective (a.) Pertaining to Bordeaux in the south of France. |
bordel | noun (n.) Alt. of Bordello |
bordello | noun (n.) A brothel; a bawdyhouse; a house devoted to prostitution. |
bordelais | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to Bordeaux, in France, or to the district around Bordeaux. |
bordeller | noun (n.) A keeper or a frequenter of a brothel. |
border | noun (n.) The outer part or edge of anything, as of a garment, a garden, etc.; margin; verge; brink. |
noun (n.) A boundary; a frontier of a state or of the settled part of a country; a frontier district. | |
noun (n.) A strip or stripe arranged along or near the edge of something, as an ornament or finish. | |
noun (n.) A narrow flower bed. | |
verb (v. i.) To touch at the edge or boundary; to be contiguous or adjacent; -- with on or upon as, Connecticut borders on Massachusetts. | |
verb (v. i.) To approach; to come near to; to verge. | |
verb (v. t.) To make a border for; to furnish with a border, as for ornament; as, to border a garment or a garden. | |
verb (v. t.) To be, or to have, contiguous to; to touch, or be touched, as by a border; to be, or to have, near the limits or boundary; as, the region borders a forest, or is bordered on the north by a forest. | |
verb (v. t.) To confine within bounds; to limit. |
bordering | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Border |
borderer | noun (n.) One who dwells on a border, or at the extreme part or confines of a country, region, or tract of land; one who dwells near to a place or region. |
bordland | noun (n.) Either land held by a bordar, or the land which a lord kept for the maintenance of his board, or table. |
bordlode | noun (n.) The service formerly required of a tenant, to carry timber from the woods to the lord's house. |
bordman | noun (n.) A bordar; a tenant in bordage. |
bordrag | noun (n.) Alt. of Bordraging |
bordraging | noun (n.) An incursion upon the borders of a country; a raid. |
bordure | noun (n.) A border one fifth the width of the shield, surrounding the field. It is usually plain, but may be charged. |
boring | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Bore |
noun (n.) The act or process of one who, or that which, bores; as, the boring of cannon; the boring of piles and ship timbers by certain marine mollusks. | |
noun (n.) A hole made by boring. | |
noun (n.) The chips or fragments made by boring. |
bore | noun (n.) A hole made by boring; a perforation. |
noun (n.) The internal cylindrical cavity of a gun, cannon, pistol, or other firearm, or of a pipe or tube. | |
noun (n.) The size of a hole; the interior diameter of a tube or gun barrel; the caliber. | |
noun (n.) A tool for making a hole by boring, as an auger. | |
noun (n.) Caliber; importance. | |
noun (n.) A person or thing that wearies by prolixity or dullness; a tiresome person or affair; any person or thing which causes ennui. | |
noun (n.) A tidal flood which regularly or occasionally rushes into certain rivers of peculiar configuration or location, in one or more waves which present a very abrupt front of considerable height, dangerous to shipping, as at the mouth of the Amazon, in South America, the Hoogly and Indus, in India, and the Tsien-tang, in China. | |
noun (n.) Less properly, a very high and rapid tidal flow, when not so abrupt, such as occurs at the Bay of Fundy and in the British Channel. | |
verb (v. t.) To perforate or penetrate, as a solid body, by turning an auger, gimlet, drill, or other instrument; to make a round hole in or through; to pierce; as, to bore a plank. | |
verb (v. t.) To form or enlarge by means of a boring instrument or apparatus; as, to bore a steam cylinder or a gun barrel; to bore a hole. | |
verb (v. t.) To make (a passage) by laborious effort, as in boring; as, to bore one's way through a crowd; to force a narrow and difficult passage through. | |
verb (v. t.) To weary by tedious iteration or by dullness; to tire; to trouble; to vex; to annoy; to pester. | |
verb (v. t.) To befool; to trick. | |
verb (v. i.) To make a hole or perforation with, or as with, a boring instrument; to cut a circular hole by the rotary motion of a tool; as, to bore for water or oil (i. e., to sink a well by boring for water or oil); to bore with a gimlet; to bore into a tree (as insects). | |
verb (v. i.) To be pierced or penetrated by an instrument that cuts as it turns; as, this timber does not bore well, or is hard to bore. | |
verb (v. i.) To push forward in a certain direction with laborious effort. | |
verb (v. i.) To shoot out the nose or toss it in the air; -- said of a horse. | |
(imp.) of Bear | |
() imp. of 1st & 2d Bear. |
boreal | adjective (a.) Northern; pertaining to the north, or to the north wind; as, a boreal bird; a boreal blast. |
adjective (a.) Designating or pertaining to a terrestrial division consisting of the northern and mountainous parts of both the Old and the New World; -- equivalent to the Holarctic region exclusive of the Transition, Sonoran, and corresponding areas. The term is used by American authors and applied by them chiefly to the Nearctic subregion. The Boreal region includes approximately all of North and Central America in which the mean temperature of the hottest season does not exceed 18¡ C. (= 64.4¡ F.). Its subdivisions are the Arctic zone and Boreal zone, the latter including the area between the Arctic and Transition zones. |
boreas | noun (n.) The north wind; -- usually a personification. |
borecole | noun (n.) A brassicaceous plant of many varieties, cultivated for its leaves, which are not formed into a compact head like the cabbage, but are loose, and are generally curled or wrinkled; kale. |
boredom | noun (n.) The state of being bored, or pestered; a state of ennui. |
noun (n.) The realm of bores; bores, collectively. |
boree | noun (n.) Same as BourrEe. |
borel | noun (n.) See Borrel. |
borele | noun (n.) The smaller two-horned rhinoceros of South Africa (Atelodus bicornis). |
borer | noun (n.) One that bores; an instrument for boring. |
noun (n.) A marine, bivalve mollusk, of the genus Teredo and allies, which burrows in wood. See Teredo. | |
noun (n.) Any bivalve mollusk (Saxicava, Lithodomus, etc.) which bores into limestone and similar substances. | |
noun (n.) One of the larvae of many species of insects, which penetrate trees, as the apple, peach, pine, etc. See Apple borer, under Apple. | |
noun (n.) The hagfish (Myxine). |
boric | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or containing, boron. |
boride | noun (n.) A binary compound of boron with a more positive or basic element or radical; -- formerly called boruret. |
borneol | noun (n.) A rare variety of camphor, C10H17.OH, resembling ordinary camphor, from which it can be produced by reduction. It is said to occur in the camphor tree of Borneo and Sumatra (Dryobalanops camphora), but the natural borneol is rarely found in European or American commerce, being in great request by the Chinese. Called also Borneo camphor, Malay camphor, and camphol. |
bornite | noun (n.) A valuable ore of copper, containing copper, iron, and sulphur; -- also called purple copper ore (or erubescite), in allusion to the colors shown upon the slightly tarnished surface. |
borofluoride | noun (n.) A double fluoride of boron and hydrogen, or some other positive element, or radical; -- called also fluoboride, and formerly fluoborate. |
boroglyceride | noun (n.) A compound of boric acid and glycerin, used as an antiseptic. |
boron | noun (n.) A nonmetallic element occurring abundantly in borax. It is reduced with difficulty to the free state, when it can be obtained in several different forms; viz., as a substance of a deep olive color, in a semimetallic form, and in colorless quadratic crystals similar to the diamond in hardness and other properties. It occurs in nature also in boracite, datolite, tourmaline, and some other minerals. Atomic weight 10.9. Symbol B. |
borosilicate | noun (n.) A double salt of boric and silicic acids, as in the natural minerals tourmaline, datolite, etc. |
borough | noun (n.) In England, an incorporated town that is not a city; also, a town that sends members to parliament; in Scotland, a body corporate, consisting of the inhabitants of a certain district, erected by the sovereign, with a certain jurisdiction; in America, an incorporated town or village, as in Pennsylvania and Connecticut. |
noun (n.) The collective body of citizens or inhabitants of a borough; as, the borough voted to lay a tax. | |
noun (n.) An association of men who gave pledges or sureties to the king for the good behavior of each other. | |
noun (n.) The pledge or surety thus given. |
boroughhead | noun (n.) See Headborough. |
boroughholder | noun (n.) A headborough; a borsholder. |
boroughmaster | noun (n.) The mayor, governor, or bailiff of a borough. |
boroughmonger | noun (n.) One who buys or sells the parliamentary seats of boroughs. |
boroughmongering | noun (n.) Alt. of Boroughmongery |
boroughmongery | noun (n.) The practices of a boroughmonger. |
borracho | noun (n.) See Borachio. |
borrage | adjective (a.) Alt. of Borraginaceous |
borraginaceous | adjective (a.) See Borage, n., etc. |
borrel | noun (n.) Coarse woolen cloth; hence, coarse clothing; a garment. |
noun (n.) A kind of light stuff, of silk and wool. | |
noun (n.) Ignorant, unlearned; belonging to the laity. |
borrowing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Borrow |
borrow | noun (n.) Something deposited as security; a pledge; a surety; a hostage. |
noun (n.) The act of borrowing. | |
verb (v. t.) To receive from another as a loan, with the implied or expressed intention of returning the identical article or its equivalent in kind; -- the opposite of lend. | |
verb (v. t.) To take (one or more) from the next higher denomination in order to add it to the next lower; -- a term of subtraction when the figure of the subtrahend is larger than the corresponding one of the minuend. | |
verb (v. t.) To copy or imitate; to adopt; as, to borrow the style, manner, or opinions of another. | |
verb (v. t.) To feign or counterfeit. | |
verb (v. t.) To receive; to take; to derive. |
borrower | noun (n.) One who borrows. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH BORA:
English Words which starts with 'b' and ends with 'a':
baa | noun (n.) The cry or bleating of a sheep; a bleat. |
verb (v. i.) To cry baa, or bleat as a sheep. |
baba | noun (n.) A kind of plum cake. |
babiroussa | noun (n.) Alt. of Babirussa |
babirussa | noun (n.) A large hoglike quadruped (Sus, / Porcus, babirussa) of the East Indies, sometimes domesticated; the Indian hog. Its upper canine teeth or tusks are large and recurved. |
babyroussa | noun (n.) Alt. of Babyrussa |
babyrussa | noun (n.) See Babyroussa. |
baccara | noun (n.) Alt. of Baccarat |
bacchanalia | noun (n. pl.) A feast or an orgy in honor of Bacchus. |
noun (n. pl.) Hence: A drunken feast; drunken reveler. |
bacteria | noun (n.p.) See Bacterium. |
(pl. ) of Bacterium |
badiaga | noun (n.) A fresh-water sponge (Spongilla), common in the north of Europe, the powder of which is used to take away the livid marks of bruises. |
bafta | noun (n.) A coarse stuff, usually of cotton, originally made in India. Also, an imitation of this fabric made for export. |
baggala | noun (n.) A two-masted Arab or Indian trading vessel, used in Indian Ocean. |
balaenoidea | noun (n.) A division of the Cetacea, including the right whale and all other whales having the mouth fringed with baleen. See Baleen. |
balistraria | noun (n.) A narrow opening, often cruciform, through which arrows might be discharged. |
ballista | noun (n.) An ancient military engine, in the form of a crossbow, used for hurling large missiles. |
balsa | noun (n.) A raft or float, used principally on the Pacific coast of South America. |
banana | noun (n.) A perennial herbaceous plant of almost treelike size (Musa sapientum); also, its edible fruit. See Musa. |
bandala | noun (n.) A fabric made in Manilla from the older leaf sheaths of the abaca (Musa textilis). |
bandanna | noun (n.) Alt. of Bandana |
bandana | noun (n.) A species of silk or cotton handkerchief, having a uniformly dyed ground, usually of red or blue, with white or yellow figures of a circular, lozenge, or other simple form. |
noun (n.) A style of calico printing, in which white or bright spots are produced upon cloth previously dyed of a uniform red or dark color, by discharging portions of the color by chemical means, while the rest of the cloth is under pressure. |
barbara | noun (n.) The first word in certain mnemonic lines which represent the various forms of the syllogism. It indicates a syllogism whose three propositions are universal affirmatives. |
baria | noun (n.) Baryta. |
barilla | noun (n.) A name given to several species of Salsola from which soda is made, by burning the barilla in heaps and lixiviating the ashes. |
noun (n.) The alkali produced from the plant, being an impure carbonate of soda, used for making soap, glass, etc., and for bleaching purposes. | |
noun (n.) Impure soda obtained from the ashes of any seashore plant, or kelp. |
barracuda | noun (n.) Alt. of Barracouata |
noun (n.) Any of several voracious pikelike marine fishes allied to the gray mullets, constituting the genus Sphyraena and family Sphyraenidae. The great barracuda (S. barracuda) of the West Indies, Florida, etc., is often six feet or more long, and as dangerous as a shark. In Cuba its flesh is reputed to be poisonous. S. Argentea of the Pacific coast and S. sphyraena of Europe are smaller species, and are used as food. |
barracouata | noun (n.) A voracious pikelike, marine fish, of the genus Sphyraena, sometimes used as food. |
noun (n.) A large edible fresh-water fish of Australia and New Zealand (Thyrsites atun). |
barranca | noun (n.) A ravine caused by heavy rains or a watercourse. |
baryta | noun (n.) An oxide of barium (or barytum); a heavy earth with a specific gravity above 4. |
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. |
bassa | noun (n.) Alt. of Bassaw |
batata | noun (n.) An aboriginal American name for the sweet potato (Ipomaea batatas). |
batrachia | noun (n. pl.) The order of amphibians which includes the frogs and toads; the Anura. Sometimes the word is used in a wider sense as equivalent to Amphibia. |
batta | noun (n.) Extra pay; esp. an extra allowance to an English officer serving in India. |
noun (n.) Rate of exchange; also, the discount on uncurrent coins. |
battalia | noun (n.) Order of battle; disposition or arrangement of troops (brigades, regiments, battalions, etc.), or of a naval force, for action. |
noun (n.) An army in battle array; also, the main battalia or body. |
battuta | noun (n.) The measuring of time by beating. |
baya | noun (n.) The East Indian weaver bird (Ploceus Philippinus). |
bdelloidea | noun (n. pl.) The order of Annulata which includes the leeches. See Hirudinea. |
bdellomorpha | noun (n.) An order of Nemertina, including the large leechlike worms (Malacobdella) often parasitic in clams. |
beccabunga | noun (n.) See Brooklime. |
becuna | noun (n.) A fish of the Mediterranean (Sphyraena spet). See Barracuda. |
bega | noun (n.) See Bigha. |
begonia | noun (n.) A genus of plants, mostly of tropical America, many species of which are grown as ornamental plants. The leaves are curiously one-sided, and often exhibit brilliant colors. |
belladonna | noun (n.) An herbaceous European plant (Atropa belladonna) with reddish bell-shaped flowers and shining black berries. The whole plant and its fruit are very poisonous, and the root and leaves are used as powerful medicinal agents. Its properties are largely due to the alkaloid atropine which it contains. Called also deadly nightshade. |
noun (n.) A species of Amaryllis (A. belladonna); the belladonna lily. |
bellona | noun (n.) The goddess of war. |
beluga | noun (n.) A cetacean allied to the dolphins. |
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. |
bengola | noun (n.) A Bengal light. |
beretta | noun (n.) Same as Berretta. |
berretta | noun (n.) A square cap worn by ecclesiastics of the Roman Catholic Church. A cardinal's berretta is scarlet; that worn by other clerics is black, except that a bishop's is lined with green. |
bertha | noun (n.) A kind of collar or cape worn by ladies. |
beteela | noun (n.) An East India muslin, formerly used for cravats, veils, etc. |
bibliomania | noun (n.) A mania for acquiring books. |
bibliophobia | noun (n.) A dread of books. |
bibliotheca | noun (n.) A library. |
biga | noun (n.) A two-horse chariot. |
bigha | noun (n.) A measure of land in India, varying from a third of an acre to an acre. |
bignonia | noun (n.) A large genus of American, mostly tropical, climbing shrubs, having compound leaves and showy somewhat tubular flowers. B. capreolata is the cross vine of the Southern United States. The trumpet creeper was formerly considered to be of this genus. |
bimana | noun (n. pl.) Animals having two hands; -- a term applied by Cuvier to man as a special order of Mammalia. |
bipinnaria | noun (n.) The larva of certain starfishes as developed in the free-swimming stage. |
biretta | noun (n.) Same as Berretta. |
blastema | noun (n.) The structureless, protoplasmic tissue of the embryo; the primitive basis of an organ yet unformed, from which it grows. |
blastoidea | noun (n. pl.) One of the divisions of Crinoidea found fossil in paleozoic rocks; pentremites. They are so named on account of their budlike form. |
blastula | noun (n.) That stage in the development of the ovum in which the outer cells of the morula become more defined and form the blastoderm. |
blea | noun (n.) The part of a tree which lies immediately under the bark; the alburnum or sapwood. |
blennorrhea | noun (n.) An inordinate secretion and discharge of mucus. |
noun (n.) Gonorrhea. |
boa | noun (n.) A genus of large American serpents, including the boa constrictor, the emperor boa of Mexico (B. imperator), and the chevalier boa of Peru (B. eques). |
noun (n.) A long, round fur tippet; -- so called from its resemblance in shape to the boa constrictor. |
bocca | noun (n.) The round hole in the furnace of a glass manufactory through which the fused glass is taken out. |
bohea | noun (n.) Bohea tea, an inferior kind of black tea. See under Tea. |
bohemia | noun (n.) A country of central Europe. |
noun (n.) Fig.: The region or community of social Bohemians. See Bohemian, n., 3. |
bologna | noun (n.) A city of Italy which has given its name to various objects. |
noun (n.) A Bologna sausage. |
bonanza | noun (n.) In mining, a rich mine or vein of silver or gold; hence, anything which is a mine of wealth or yields a large income. |
bonetta | noun (n.) See Bonito. |
bosa | noun (n.) A drink, used in the East. See Boza. |
bothrenchyma | noun (n.) Dotted or pitted ducts or vessels forming the pores seen in many kinds of wood. |
bougainvillaea | noun (n.) A genus of plants of the order Nyctoginaceae, from tropical South America, having the flowers surrounded by large bracts. |
boza | noun (n.) An acidulated fermented drink of the Arabs and Egyptians, made from millet seed and various astringent substances; also, an intoxicating beverage made from hemp seed, darnel meal, and water. |
brachelytra | noun (n. pl.) A group of beetles having short elytra, as the rove beetles. |
brachia | noun (n. pl.) See Brachium. |
brachiata | noun (n. pl.) A division of the Crinoidea, including those furnished with long jointed arms. See Crinoidea. |
brachiolaria | noun (n. pl.) A peculiar early larval stage of certain starfishes, having a bilateral structure, and swimming by means of bands of vibrating cilia. |
brachiopoda | noun (n.) A class of Molluscoidea having a symmetrical bivalve shell, often attached by a fleshy peduncle. |
brachyptera | noun (n. pl.) A group of Coleoptera having short wings; the rove beetles. |
brachyura | noun (n. pl.) A group of decapod Crustacea, including the common crabs, characterized by a small and short abdomen, which is bent up beneath the large cephalo-thorax. [Also spelt Brachyoura.] See Crab, and Illustration in Appendix. |
bractea | noun (n.) A bract. |
brahma | noun (n.) The One First Cause; also, one of the triad of Hindoo gods. The triad consists of Brahma, the Creator, Vishnu, the Preserver, and Siva, the Destroyer. |
noun (n.) A valuable variety of large, domestic fowl, peculiar in having the comb divided lengthwise into three parts, and the legs well feathered. There are two breeds, the dark or penciled, and the light; -- called also Brahmapootra. |
brama | noun (n.) See Brahma. |
branchia | noun (n.) A gill; a respiratory organ for breathing the air contained in water, such as many aquatic and semiaquatic animals have. |
branchiogastropoda | noun (n. pl.) Those Gastropoda that breathe by branchiae, including the Prosobranchiata and Opisthobranchiata. |
branchiopoda | noun (n. pl.) An order of Entomostraca; -- so named from the feet of branchiopods having been supposed to perform the function of gills. It includes the fresh-water genera Branchipus, Apus, and Limnadia, and the genus Artemia found in salt lakes. It is also called Phyllopoda. See Phyllopoda, Cladocera. It is sometimes used in a broader sense. |
branchiostoma | noun (n.) The lancelet. See Amphioxus. |
branchiura | noun (n. pl.) A group of Entomostraca, with suctorial mouths, including species parasitic on fishes, as the carp lice (Argulus). |
brassica | noun (n.) A genus of plants embracing several species and varieties differing much in appearance and qualities: such as the common cabbage (B. oleracea), broccoli, cauliflowers, etc.; the wild turnip (B. campestris); the common turnip (B. rapa); the rape or coleseed (B. napus), etc. |
bravura | noun (n.) A florid, brilliant style of music, written for effect, to show the range and flexibility of a singer's voice, or the technical force and skill of a performer; virtuoso music. |
breccia | noun (n.) A rock composed of angular fragments either of the same mineral or of different minerals, etc., united by a cement, and commonly presenting a variety of colors. |
bregma | noun (n.) The point of junction of the coronal and sagittal sutures of the skull. |
bretwalda | noun (n.) The official title applied to that one of the Anglo-Saxon chieftains who was chosen by the other chiefs to lead them in their warfare against the British tribes. |
britannia | noun (n.) A white-metal alloy of tin, antimony, bismuth, copper, etc. It somewhat resembles silver, and is used for table ware. Called also Britannia metal. |
britzska | noun (n.) A long carriage, with a calash top, so constructed as to give space for reclining at night, when used on a journey. |
broma | noun (n.) Aliment; food. |
noun (n.) A light form of prepared cocoa (or cacao), or the drink made from it. |
bronchia | noun (n. pl.) The bronchial tubes which arise from the branching of the trachea, esp. the subdivision of the bronchi. |
bruta | noun (n.) See Edentata. |