WALDON
First name WALDON's origin is Other. WALDON means "from the welshman's hill". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with WALDON below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of waldon.(Brown names are of the same origin (Other) with WALDON and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming WALDON
FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES WALDON AS A WHOLE:
NAMES RHYMING WITH WALDON (According to last letters):
Rhyming Names According to Last 5 Letters (aldon) - Names That Ends with aldon:
Rhyming Names According to Last 4 Letters (ldon) - Names That Ends with ldon:
beldon eldon feldon weldon seldon sheldon meldon wildonRhyming Names According to Last 3 Letters (don) - Names That Ends with don:
aedon sidon dudon celyddon glendon corydon korudon ladon laomedon poseidon sarpedon spyridon raidon ardon bredon brendon burhdon caedon condon creedon croydon don gordon gradon haddon hadon haydon jadon jaedon jaidon jaydon jordon lancdon langdon mardon ogdon randon shandon lyndon landon huntingdon burdon brandon blagdon vardon celidon odon elsdon kingdon sandon seadon adon jourdon bardon braddon bradon braedon braydon raydonRhyming Names According to Last 2 Letters (on) - Names That Ends with on:
afton carnation solon strephon cihuaton nijlon sokanon odion sion accalon hebron pendragon antton erromon gotzon txanton zorion eburacon mabon bendision alston alton benton burton carelton fenton hamilton harrison histion kenton pierson preston ralstonNAMES RHYMING WITH WALDON (According to first letters):
Rhyming Names According to First 5 Letters (waldo) - Names That Begins with waldo:
waldoRhyming Names According to First 4 Letters (wald) - Names That Begins with wald:
walda waldburga waldemar waldemarr walden waldhramm waldhurga waldifrid waldmunt waldr waldrom waldronRhyming Names According to First 3 Letters (wal) - Names That Begins with wal:
walborga walborgd walbridge walbrydge walby walcot walcott waleed waleis walford walfr walfred walfrid walid walidah walker wallace wallache waller wallis walliyullah wally walmond walsh walt walten walter walthari walton waluyo walworth walwynRhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (wa) - Names That Begins with wa:
wa'il wacfeld wachiru wachiwi wacian wacleah wacuman wada wadanhyll wade wadi wadley wadsworth waed waefreleah waelfwulf waer waerheall waeringawicum waescburne wafa' wafeeq wafeeqa wafid wafiq wafiqah wafiya wafiyy wafiyyah wagaye wagner wahanassatta wahchinksapa wahchintonka wahed wahibah wahid wahkan wain wainwright wait waite wajeeh wajeeha wajih wajihah wakanda wake wakefield wakeley wakeman waki wakil wakiza waklerNAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH WALDON:
First Names which starts with 'wa' and ends with 'on':
wanahton warton washington watson wattekinson wattikinson wattson waylon waysonFirst Names which starts with 'w' and ends with 'n':
wann warden waren warian warren wartun washburn waylan waylin welborn welburn wellburn wellington welton wematin weolingtun werian westen westin weston westun weylin weylyn wharton whelan whiteman whitman wielladun wiellatun wigman wijdan wilburn willan williamon williamson willsn wilson wilton win winn winston winton wissian wittatun witton woden woodman worden worthington worton wotan woudman wregan wryeton wyiltun wylltun wyman wynn wynston wynton wyrttunEnglish Words Rhyming WALDON
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES WALDON AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH WALDON (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (aldon) - English Words That Ends with aldon:
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (ldon) - English Words That Ends with ldon:
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (don) - English Words That Ends with don:
abaddon | noun (n.) The destroyer, or angel of the bottomless pit; -- the same as Apollyon and Asmodeus. |
noun (n.) Hell; the bottomless pit. |
abandon | noun (n.) A complete giving up to natural impulses; freedom from artificial constraint; careless freedom or ease. |
verb (v. t.) To cast or drive out; to banish; to expel; to reject. | |
verb (v. t.) To give up absolutely; to forsake entirely ; to renounce utterly; to relinquish all connection with or concern on; to desert, as a person to whom one owes allegiance or fidelity; to quit; to surrender. | |
verb (v. t.) Reflexively: To give (one's self) up without attempt at self-control; to yield (one's self) unrestrainedly; -- often in a bad sense. | |
verb (v. t.) To relinquish all claim to; -- used when an insured person gives up to underwriters all claim to the property covered by a policy, which may remain after loss or damage by a peril insured against. | |
verb (v.) Abandonment; relinquishment. |
achilles' tendon | noun (n.) The strong tendon formed of the united tendons of the large muscles in the calf of the leg, an inserted into the bone of the heel; -- so called from the mythological account of Achilles being held by the heel when dipped in the River Styx. |
acotyledon | noun (n.) A plant which has no cotyledons, as the dodder and all flowerless plants. |
anodon | noun (n.) A genus of fresh-water bivalves, having no teeth at the hinge. |
bandon | noun (n.) Disposal; control; license. |
bombardon | noun (n.) Originally, a deep-toned instrument of the oboe or bassoon family; thence, a bass reed stop on the organ. The name bombardon is now given to a brass instrument, the lowest of the saxhorns, in tone resembling the ophicleide. |
bourdon | noun (n.) A pilgrim's staff. |
noun (n.) A drone bass, as in a bagpipe, or a hurdy-gurdy. See Burden (of a song.) | |
noun (n.) A kind of organ stop. |
boustrophedon | noun (n.) An ancient mode of writing, in alternate directions, one line from left to right, and the next from right to left (as fields are plowed), as in early Greek and Hittite. |
burdon | noun (n.) A pilgrim's staff. |
calcedon | noun (n.) A foul vein, like chalcedony, in some precious stones. |
celadon | noun (n.) A pale sea-green color; also, porcelain or fine pottery of this tint. |
chelidon | noun (n.) The hollow at the flexure of the arm. |
clarendon | noun (n.) A style of type having a narrow and heave face. It is made in all sizes. |
cordon | noun (n.) A cord or ribbon bestowed or borne as a badge of honor; a broad ribbon, usually worn after the manner of a baldric, constituting a mark of a very high grade in an honorary order. Cf. Grand cordon. |
noun (n.) The cord worn by a Franciscan friar. | |
noun (n.) The coping of the scarp wall, which projects beyong the face of the wall a few inches. | |
noun (n.) A line or series of sentinels, or of military posts, inclosing or guarding any place or thing. | |
noun (n.) A rich and ornamental lace or string, used to secure a mantle in some costumes of state. |
corindon | noun (n.) See Corrundum. |
coryphodon | noun (n.) A genus of extinct mammals from the eocene tertiary of Europe and America. Its species varied in size between the tapir and rhinoceros, and were allied to those animals, but had short, plantigrade, five-toed feet, like the elephant. |
cotyledon | noun (n.) One of the patches of villi found in some forms of placenta. |
noun (n.) A leaf borne by the caulicle or radicle of an embryo; a seed leaf. |
croydon | noun (n.) A kind of carriage like a gig, orig. of wicker-work. |
noun (n.) A kind of cotton sheeting; also, a calico. |
decachordon | noun (n.) An ancient Greek musical instrument of ten strings, resembling the harp. |
noun (n.) Something consisting of ten parts. |
dicotyledon | noun (n.) A plant whose seeds divide into two seed lobes, or cotyledons, in germinating. |
diodon | noun (n.) A genus of spinose, plectognath fishes, having the teeth of each jaw united into a single beaklike plate. They are able to inflate the body by taking in air or water, and, hence, are called globefishes, swellfishes, etc. Called also porcupine fishes, and sea hedgehogs. |
noun (n.) A genus of whales. |
diprotodon | noun (n.) An extinct Quaternary marsupial from Australia, about as large as the hippopotamus; -- so named because of its two large front teeth. See Illustration in Appendix. |
don | noun (n.) Sir; Mr; Signior; -- a title in Spain, formerly given to noblemen and gentlemen only, but now common to all classes. |
noun (n.) A grand personage, or one making pretension to consequence; especially, the head of a college, or one of the fellows at the English universities. | |
verb (v. t.) To put on; to dress in; to invest one's self with. |
espadon | noun (n.) A long, heavy, two-handed and two-edged sword, formerly used by Spanish foot soldiers and by executioners. |
euroclydon | noun (n.) A tempestuous northeast wind which blows in the Mediterranean. See Levanter. |
fondon | noun (n.) A large copper vessel used for hot amalgamation. |
formedon | noun (n.) A writ of right for a tenant in tail in case of a discontinuance of the estate tail. This writ has been abolished. |
gardon | noun (n.) A European cyprinoid fish; the id. |
glyptodon | noun (n.) An extinct South American quaternary mammal, allied to the armadillos. It was as large as an ox, was covered with tessellated scales, and had fluted teeth. |
guerdon | noun (n.) A reward; requital; recompense; -- used in both a good and a bad sense. |
noun (n.) To give guerdon to; to reward; to be a recompense for. |
hagdon | noun (n.) One of several species of sea birds of the genus Puffinus; esp., P. major, the greater shearwarter, and P. Stricklandi, the black hagdon or sooty shearwater; -- called also hagdown, haglin, and hag. See Shearwater. |
hecatompedon | noun (n.) A name given to the old Parthenon at Athens, because measuring 100 Greek feet, probably in the width across the stylobate. |
iguanodon | noun (n.) A genus of gigantic herbivorous dinosaurs having a birdlike pelvis and large hind legs with three-toed feet capable of supporting the entire body. Its teeth resemble those of the iguana, whence its name. Several species are known, mostly from the Wealden of England and Europe. See Illustration in Appendix. |
jurdon | noun (n.) Jordan. |
labyrinthodon | noun (n.) A genus of very large fossil amphibians, of the Triassic period, having bony plates on the under side of the body. It is the type of the order Labyrinthodonta. Called also Mastodonsaurus. |
lardon | noun (n.) Alt. of Lardoon |
leontodon | noun (n.) A genus of liguliflorous composite plants, including the fall dandelion (L. autumnale), and formerly the true dandelion; -- called also lion's tooth. |
london | noun (n.) The capital city of England. |
lycoperdon | noun (n.) A genus of fungi, remarkable for the great quantity of spores, forming a fine dust, which is thrown out like smoke when the plant is compressed or burst; puffball. |
mastodon | noun (n.) An extinct genus of mammals closely allied to the elephant, but having less complex molar teeth, and often a pair of lower, as well as upper, tusks, which are incisor teeth. The species were mostly larger than elephants, and their romains occur in nearly all parts of the world in deposits ranging from Miocene to late Quaternary time. |
monocotyledon | noun (n.) A plant with only one cotyledon, or seed lobe. |
mylodon | noun (n.) An extinct genus of large slothlike American edentates, allied to Megatherium. |
myrmidon | noun (n.) One of a fierce tribe or troop who accompained Achilles, their king, to the Trojan war. |
noun (n.) A soldier or a subordinate civil officer who executes cruel orders of a superior without protest or pity; -- sometimes applied to bailiffs, constables, etc. |
oreodon | noun (n.) A genus of extinct herbivorous mammals, abundant in the Tertiary formation of the Rocky Mountains. It is more or less related to the camel, hog, and deer. |
parallelopipedon | noun (n.) A parallelopiped. |
polycotyledon | noun (n.) A plant that has many, or more than two, cotyledons in the seed. |
pteranodon | noun (n.) A genus of American Cretaceous pterodactyls destitute of teeth. Several species are known, some of which had an expanse of wings of twenty feet or more. |
randon | noun (n.) Random. |
verb (v. i.) To go or stray at random. |
sindon | noun (n.) A wrapper. |
noun (n.) A small rag or pledget introduced into the hole in the cranium made by a trephine. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH WALDON (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (waldo) - Words That Begins with waldo:
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (wald) - Words That Begins with wald:
wald | noun (n.) A forest; -- used as a termination of names. See Weald. |
waldenses | noun (n. pl.) A sect of dissenters from the ecclesiastical system of the Roman Catholic Church, who in the 13th century were driven by persecution to the valleys of Piedmont, where the sect survives. They profess substantially Protestant principles. |
waldensian | noun (n.) One Holding the Waldensian doctrines. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the Waldenses. |
waldgrave | noun (n.) In the old German empire, the head forest keeper. |
waldheimia | noun (n.) A genus of brachiopods of which many species are found in the fossil state. A few still exist in the deep sea. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (wal) - Words That Begins with wal:
wale | noun (n.) A streak or mark made on the skin by a rod or whip; a stripe; a wheal. See Wheal. |
noun (n.) A ridge or streak rising above the surface, as of cloth; hence, the texture of cloth. | |
noun (n.) A timber bolted to a row of piles to secure them together and in position. | |
noun (n.) Certain sets or strakes of the outside planking of a vessel; as, the main wales, or the strakes of planking under the port sills of the gun deck; channel wales, or those along the spar deck, etc. | |
noun (n.) A wale knot, or wall knot. | |
verb (v. t.) To mark with wales, or stripes. | |
verb (v. t.) To choose; to select; specifically (Mining), to pick out the refuse of (coal) by hand, in order to clean it. |
walhalla | noun (n.) See Valhalla. |
waling | noun (n.) Same as Wale, n., 4. |
walking | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Walk |
() a. & n. from Walk, v. |
walk | noun (n.) The act of walking, or moving on the feet with a slow pace; advance without running or leaping. |
noun (n.) The act of walking for recreation or exercise; as, a morning walk; an evening walk. | |
noun (n.) Manner of walking; gait; step; as, we often know a person at a distance by his walk. | |
noun (n.) That in or through which one walks; place or distance walked over; a place for walking; a path or avenue prepared for foot passengers, or for taking air and exercise; way; road; hence, a place or region in which animals may graze; place of wandering; range; as, a sheep walk. | |
noun (n.) A frequented track; habitual place of action; sphere; as, the walk of the historian. | |
noun (n.) Conduct; course of action; behavior. | |
noun (n.) The route or district regularly served by a vender; as, a milkman's walk. | |
noun (n.) In coffee, coconut, and other plantations, the space between them. | |
noun (n.) A place for keeping and training puppies. | |
noun (n.) An inclosed area of some extent to which a gamecock is confined to prepare him for fighting. | |
verb (v. i.) To move along on foot; to advance by steps; to go on at a moderate pace; specifically, of two-legged creatures, to proceed at a slower or faster rate, but without running, or lifting one foot entirely before the other touches the ground. | |
verb (v. i.) To move or go on the feet for exercise or amusement; to take one's exercise; to ramble. | |
verb (v. i.) To be stirring; to be abroad; to go restlessly about; -- said of things or persons expected to remain quiet, as a sleeping person, or the spirit of a dead person; to go about as a somnambulist or a specter. | |
verb (v. i.) To be in motion; to act; to move; to wag. | |
verb (v. i.) To behave; to pursue a course of life; to conduct one's self. | |
verb (v. i.) To move off; to depart. | |
verb (v. t.) To pass through, over, or upon; to traverse; to perambulate; as, to walk the streets. | |
verb (v. t.) To cause to walk; to lead, drive, or ride with a slow pace; as to walk one's horses. | |
verb (v. t.) To subject, as cloth or yarn, to the fulling process; to full. | |
verb (v. t.) To put or keep (a puppy) in a walk; to train (puppies) in a walk. | |
verb (v. t.) To move in a manner likened to walking. |
walkable | adjective (a.) Fit to be walked on; capable of being walked on or over. |
walker | noun (n.) One who walks; a pedestrian. |
noun (n.) That with which one walks; a foot. | |
noun (n.) A forest officer appointed to walk over a certain space for inspection; a forester. | |
verb (v. t.) A fuller of cloth. | |
verb (v. t.) Any ambulatorial orthopterous insect, as a stick insect. |
walkyr | noun (n.) See Valkyria. |
wall | noun (n.) A kind of knot often used at the end of a rope; a wall knot; a wale. |
noun (n.) A work or structure of stone, brick, or other materials, raised to some height, and intended for defense or security, solid and permanent inclosing fence, as around a field, a park, a town, etc., also, one of the upright inclosing parts of a building or a room. | |
noun (n.) A defense; a rampart; a means of protection; in the plural, fortifications, in general; works for defense. | |
noun (n.) An inclosing part of a receptacle or vessel; as, the walls of a steam-engine cylinder. | |
noun (n.) The side of a level or drift. | |
noun (n.) The country rock bounding a vein laterally. | |
verb (v. t.) To inclose with a wall, or as with a wall. | |
verb (v. t.) To defend by walls, or as if by walls; to fortify. | |
verb (v. t.) To close or fill with a wall, as a doorway. |
walling | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Wall |
noun (n.) The act of making a wall or walls. | |
noun (n.) Walls, in general; material for walls. |
wallaba | noun (n.) A leguminous tree (Eperua falcata) of Demerara, with pinnate leaves and clusters of red flowers. The reddish brown wood is used for palings and shingles. |
wallaby | noun (n.) Any one of numerous species of kangaroos belonging to the genus Halmaturus, native of Australia and Tasmania, especially the smaller species, as the brush kangaroo (H. Bennettii) and the pademelon (H. thetidis). The wallabies chiefly inhabit the wooded district and bushy plains. |
wallah | noun (n.) A black variety of the jaguar; -- called also tapir tiger. |
wallaroo | noun (n.) Any one of several species of kangaroos of the genus Macropus, especially M. robustus, sometimes called the great wallaroo. |
wallbird | noun (n.) The spotted flycatcher. |
waller | noun (n.) One who builds walls. |
noun (n.) The wels. |
wallet | noun (n.) A bag or sack for carrying about the person, as a bag for carrying the necessaries for a journey; a knapsack; a beggar's receptacle for charity; a peddler's pack. |
noun (n.) A pocketbook for keeping money about the person. | |
noun (n.) Anything protuberant and swagging. |
walleteer | noun (n.) One who carries a wallet; a foot traveler; a tramping beggar. |
wallflower | noun (n.) A perennial, cruciferous plant (Cheiranthus Cheiri), with sweet-scented flowers varying in color from yellow to orange and deep red. In Europe it very common on old walls. |
noun (n.) A lady at a ball, who, either from choice, or because not asked to dance, remains a spectator. | |
noun (n.) In Australia, the desert poison bush (Gastrolobium grandiflorum); -- called also native wallflower. |
wallhick | noun (n.) The lesser spotted woodpecker (Dryobates minor). |
walloons | noun (n. pl.) A Romanic people inhabiting that part of Belgium which comprises the provinces of Hainaut, Namur, Liege, and Luxembourg, and about one third of Brabant; also, the language spoken by this people. Used also adjectively. |
wallop | noun (n.) A quick, rolling movement; a gallop. |
noun (n.) A thick piece of fat. | |
noun (n.) A blow. | |
verb (v. i.) To move quickly, but with great effort; to gallop. | |
verb (v. i.) To boil with a continued bubbling or heaving and rolling, with noise. | |
verb (v. i.) To move in a rolling, cumbersome manner; to waddle. | |
verb (v. i.) To be slatternly. | |
verb (v. t.) To beat soundly; to flog; to whip. | |
verb (v. t.) To wrap up temporarily. | |
verb (v. t.) To throw or tumble over. |
walloping | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Wallop |
wallowing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Wallow |
wallow | noun (n.) To roll one's self about, as in mire; to tumble and roll about; to move lazily or heavily in any medium; to flounder; as, swine wallow in the mire. |
noun (n.) To live in filth or gross vice; to disport one's self in a beastly and unworthy manner. | |
noun (n.) To wither; to fade. | |
noun (n.) A kind of rolling walk. | |
noun (n.) Act of wallowing. | |
noun (n.) A place to which an animal comes to wallow; also, the depression in the ground made by its wallowing; as, a buffalo wallow. | |
verb (v. t.) To roll; esp., to roll in anything defiling or unclean. |
wallower | noun (n.) One who, or that which, wallows. |
noun (n.) A lantern wheel; a trundle. |
wallowish | adjective (a.) Flat; insipid. |
wallwort | noun (n.) The dwarf elder, or danewort (Sambucus Ebulus). |
walnut | noun (n.) The fruit or nut of any tree of the genus Juglans; also, the tree, and its timber. The seven or eight known species are all natives of the north temperate zone. |
walrus | noun (n.) A very large marine mammal (Trichecus rosmarus) of the Seal family, native of the Arctic Ocean. The male has long and powerful tusks descending from the upper jaw. It uses these in procuring food and in fighting. It is hunted for its oil, ivory, and skin. It feeds largely on mollusks. Called also morse. |
waltron | noun (n.) A walrus. |
walty | adjective (a.) Liable to roll over; crank; as, a walty ship. |
waltz | noun (n.) A dance performed by two persons in circular figures with a whirling motion; also, a piece of music composed in triple measure for this kind of dance. |
verb (v. i.) To dance a waltz. |
waltzing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Waltz |
waltzer | noun (n.) A person who waltzes. |
waler | noun (n.) A horse imported from New South Wales; also, any Australian horse. |
wallachian | noun (n.) An inhabitant of Wallachia; also, the language of the Wallachians; Roumanian. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to Wallachia, a former principality, now part of the kingdom, of Roumania. |
wallack | noun (a. & n.) See Wallachian. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH WALDON:
English Words which starts with 'wa' and ends with 'on':
wagon | noun (n.) A wheeled carriage; a vehicle on four wheels, and usually drawn by horses; especially, one used for carrying freight or merchandise. |
noun (n.) A freight car on a railway. | |
noun (n.) A chariot | |
noun (n.) The Dipper, or Charles's Wain. | |
verb (v. t.) To transport in a wagon or wagons; as, goods are wagoned from city to city. | |
verb (v. i.) To wagon goods as a business; as, the man wagons between Philadelphia and its suburbs. |
wanion | noun (n.) A word of uncertain signification, used only in the phrase with a wanion, apparently equivalent to with a vengeance, with a plague, or with misfortune. |
wanton | noun (n.) A roving, frolicsome thing; a trifler; -- used rarely as a term of endearment. |
noun (n.) One brought up without restraint; a pampered pet. | |
noun (n.) A lewd person; a lascivious man or woman. | |
verb (v. t.) Untrained; undisciplined; unrestrained; hence, loose; free; luxuriant; roving; sportive. | |
verb (v. t.) Wandering from moral rectitude; perverse; dissolute. | |
verb (v. t.) Specifically: Deviating from the rules of chastity; lewd; lustful; lascivious; libidinous; lecherous. | |
verb (v. t.) Reckless; heedless; as, wanton mischief. | |
verb (v. i.) To rove and ramble without restraint, rule, or limit; to revel; to play loosely; to frolic. | |
verb (v. i.) To sport in lewdness; to play the wanton; to play lasciviously. | |
verb (v. t.) To cause to become wanton; also, to waste in wantonness. |
watermelon | noun (n.) The very large ovoid or roundish fruit of a cucurbitaceous plant (Citrullus vulgaris) of many varieties; also, the plant itself. The fruit sometimes weighs many pounds; its pulp is usually pink in color, and full of a sweet watery juice. It is a native of tropical Africa, but is now cultivated in many countries. See Illust. of Melon. |
waveson | noun (n.) Goods which, after shipwreck, appear floating on the waves, or sea. |