First Names Rhyming THANASIS
English Words Rhyming THANASIS
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES THANASİS AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH THANASİS (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 7 Letters (hanasis) - English Words That Ends with hanasis:
Rhyming Words According to Last 6 Letters (anasis) - English Words That Ends with anasis:
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (nasis) - English Words That Ends with nasis:
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (asis) - English Words That Ends with asis:
anabasis | noun (n.) A journey or expedition up from the coast, like that of the younger Cyrus into Central Asia, described by Xenophon in his work called "The Anabasis." |
| noun (n.) The first period, or increase, of a disease; augmentation. |
antanaclasis | noun (n.) A figure which consists in repeating the same word in a different sense; as, Learn some craft when young, that when old you may live without craft. |
| noun (n.) A repetition of words beginning a sentence, after a long parenthesis; as, Shall that heart (which not only feels them, but which has all motions of life placed in them), shall that heart, etc. |
antiperistasis | noun (n.) Opposition by which the quality opposed asquires strength; resistance or reaction roused by opposition or by the action of an opposite principle or quality. |
antiphrasis | noun (n.) The use of words in a sense opposite to their proper meaning; as when a court of justice is called a court of vengeance. |
apophasis | noun (n.) A figure by which a speaker formally declines to take notice of a favorable point, but in such a manner as to produce the effect desired. [For example, see Mark Antony's oration. Shak., Julius Caesar, iii. 2.] |
ankylostomiasis | noun (n.) A disease due to the presence of the parasites Agchylostoma duodenale, Uncinaria (subgenus Necator) americana, or allied nematodes, in the small intestine. When present in large numbers they produce a severe anaemia by sucking the blood from the intestinal walls. Called also miner's anaemia, tunnel disease, brickmaker's anaemia, Egyptian chlorosis. |
ascariasis | noun (n.) A disease, usually accompanied by colicky pains and diarrhea, caused by the presence of ascarids in the gastrointestinal canal. |
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. |
catastasis | noun (n.) That part of a speech, usually the exordium, in which the orator sets forth the subject matter to be discussed. |
| noun (n.) The state, or condition of anything; constitution; habit of body. |
crasis | noun (n.) A mixture of constituents, as of the blood; constitution; temperament. |
| noun (n.) A contraction of two vowels (as the final and initial vowels of united words) into one long vowel, or into a diphthong; synaeresis; as, cogo for coago. |
diastasis | noun (n.) A forcible of bones without fracture. |
ecbasis | noun (n.) A figure in which the orator treats of things according to their events consequences. |
ecphasis | noun (n.) An explicit declaration. |
ectasis | noun (n.) The lengthening of a syllable from short to long. |
elephantiasis | noun (n.) A disease of the skin, in which it become enormously thickened, and is rough, hard, and fissured, like an elephant's hide. |
emphasis | noun (n.) A particular stress of utterance, or force of voice, given in reading and speaking to one or more words whose signification the speaker intends to impress specially upon his audience. |
| noun (n.) A peculiar impressiveness of expression or weight of thought; vivid representation, enforcing assent; as, to dwell on a subject with great emphasis. |
entasis | noun (n.) A slight convex swelling of the shaft of a column. |
| noun (n.) Same as Entasia. |
epitasis | noun (n.) That part which embraces the main action of a play, poem, and the like, and leads on to the catastrophe; -- opposed to protasis. |
| noun (n.) The period of violence in a fever or disease; paroxysm. |
filariasis | noun (n.) The presence of filariae in the blood; infection with filariae. |
gomphiasis | noun (n.) A disease of the teeth, which causes them to loosen and fall out of their sockets. |
helminthiasis | noun (n.) A disease in which worms are present in some part of the body. |
hypochondriasis | noun (n.) A mental disorder in which melancholy and gloomy views torment the affected person, particularly concerning his own health. |
hypostasis | noun (n.) That which forms the basis of anything; underlying principle; a concept or mental entity conceived or treated as an existing being or thing. |
| noun (n.) Substance; subsistence; essence; person; personality; -- used by the early theologians to denote any one of the three subdivisions of the Godhead, the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. |
| noun (n.) Principle; an element; -- used by the alchemists in speaking of salt, sulphur, and mercury, which they considered as the three principles of all material bodies. |
| noun (n.) That which is deposited at the bottom of a fluid; sediment. |
idiocrasis | noun (n.) Idiocracy. |
lithiasis | noun (n.) The formation of stony concretions or calculi in any part of the body, especially in the bladder and urinary passages. |
menostasis | noun (n.) Stoppage of the mences. |
metabasis | noun (n.) A transition from one subject to another. |
| noun (n.) Same as Metabola. |
metaphrasis | noun (n.) Metaphrase. |
metastasis | noun (n.) A spiritual change, as during baptism. |
| noun (n.) A change in the location of a disease, as from one part to another. |
| noun (n.) The act or process by which matter is taken up by cells or tissues and is transformed into other matter; in plants, the act or process by which are produced all of those chemical changes in the constituents of the plant which are not accompanied by a production of organic matter; metabolism. |
mydriasis | noun (n.) A long-continued or excessive dilatation of the pupil of the eye. |
oasis | noun (n.) A fertile or green spot in a waste or desert, esp. in a sandy desert. |
odontiasis | noun (n.) Cutting of the teeth; dentition. |
osteoclasis | noun (n.) The operation of breaking a bone in order to correct deformity. |
periphrasis | noun (n.) See Periphrase. |
phasis | noun (n.) See Phase. |
phthiriasis | noun (n.) A disease (morbus pediculous) consisting in the excessive multiplication of lice on the human body. |
pityriasis | noun (n.) A superficial affection of the skin, characterized by irregular patches of thin scales which are shed in branlike particles. |
| noun (n.) A disease of domestic animals characterized by dry epithelial scales, and due to digestive disturbances and alteration of the function of the sebaceous glands. |
prophasis | noun (n.) Foreknowledge of a disease; prognosis. |
protasis | noun (n.) A proposition; a maxim. |
| noun (n.) The introductory or subordinate member of a sentence, generally of a conditional sentence; -- opposed to apodosis. See Apodosis. |
| noun (n.) The first part of a drama, of a poem, or the like; the introduction; opposed to epitasis. |
psoriasis | noun (n.) The state of being affected with psora. |
| noun (n.) A cutaneous disease, characterized by imbricated silvery scales, affecting only the superficial layers of the skin. |
sarcobasis | noun (n.) A fruit consisting of many dry indehiscent cells, which contain but few seeds and cohere about a common style, as in the mallows. |
satyriasis | noun (n.) Immoderate venereal appetite in the male. |
scleriasis | noun (n.) A morbid induration of the edge of the eyelid. |
| noun (n.) Induration of any part, including scleroderma. |
siriasis | noun (n.) A sunstroke. |
| noun (n.) The act of exposing to a sun bath. [Obs.] Cf. Insolation. |
stasis | noun (n.) A slackening or arrest of the blood current in the vessels, due not to a lessening of the heart's beat, but presumably to some abnormal resistance of the capillary walls. It is one of the phenomena observed in the capillaries in inflammation. |
systasis | noun (n.) A political union, confederation, or league. |
telangiectasis | noun (n.) Dilatation of the capillary vessels. |
trichiasis | noun (n.) A disease of the eye, in which the eyelashes, being turned in upon the eyeball, produce constant irritation by the motion of the lids. |
trichiniasis | noun (n.) Trichinosis. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (sis) - English Words That Ends with sis:
abassis | noun (n.) A silver coin of Persia, worth about twenty cents. |
abiogenesis | noun (n.) The supposed origination of living organisms from lifeless matter; such genesis as does not involve the action of living parents; spontaneous generation; -- called also abiogeny, and opposed to biogenesis. |
absis | noun (n.) See Apsis. |
aesthesis | noun (n.) Sensuous perception. |
agamogenesis | noun (n.) Reproduction without the union of parents of distinct sexes: asexual reproduction. |
agenesis | noun (n.) Any imperfect development of the body, or any anomaly of organization. |
agennesis | noun (n.) Impotence; sterility. |
amanuensis | noun (n.) A person whose employment is to write what another dictates, or to copy what another has written. |
amaurosis | noun (n.) A loss or decay of sight, from loss of power in the optic nerve, without any perceptible external change in the eye; -- called also gutta serena, the "drop serene" of Milton. |
amphiarthrosis | noun (n.) A form of articulation in which the bones are connected by intervening substance admitting slight motion; symphysis. |
amphigenesis | noun (n.) Sexual generation; amphigony. |
anacoenosis | noun (n.) A figure by which a speaker appeals to his hearers or opponents for their opinion on the point in debate. |
anacrusis | noun (n.) A prefix of one or two unaccented syllables to a verse properly beginning with an accented syllable. |
anadiplosis | noun (n.) A repetition of the last word or any prominent word in a sentence or clause, at the beginning of the next, with an adjunct idea; as, "He retained his virtues amidst all his misfortunes -- misfortunes which no prudence could foresee or prevent." |
anaesthesis | noun (n.) See Anaesthesia. |
anagnorisis | noun (n.) The unfolding or denouement. |
analysis | noun (n.) A resolution of anything, whether an object of the senses or of the intellect, into its constituent or original elements; an examination of the component parts of a subject, each separately, as the words which compose a sentence, the tones of a tune, or the simple propositions which enter into an argument. It is opposed to synthesis. |
| noun (n.) The separation of a compound substance, by chemical processes, into its constituents, with a view to ascertain either (a) what elements it contains, or (b) how much of each element is present. The former is called qualitative, and the latter quantitative analysis. |
| noun (n.) The tracing of things to their source, and the resolving of knowledge into its original principles. |
| noun (n.) The resolving of problems by reducing the conditions that are in them to equations. |
| noun (n.) A syllabus, or table of the principal heads of a discourse, disposed in their natural order. |
| noun (n.) A brief, methodical illustration of the principles of a science. In this sense it is nearly synonymous with synopsis. |
| noun (n.) The process of ascertaining the name of a species, or its place in a system of classification, by means of an analytical table or key. |
anamnesis | noun (n.) A recalling to mind; recollection. |
anamorphosis | noun (n.) A distorted or monstrous projection or representation of an image on a plane or curved surface, which, when viewed from a certain point, or as reflected from a curved mirror or through a polyhedron, appears regular and in proportion; a deformation of an image. |
| noun (n.) Same as Anamorphism, 2. |
| noun (n.) A morbid or monstrous development, or change of form, or degeneration. |
anapophysis | noun (n.) An accessory process in many lumbar vertebrae. |
anastomosis | noun (n.) The inosculation of vessels, or intercommunication between two or more vessels or nerves, as the cross communication between arteries or veins. |
anchylosis | noun (n.) Alt. of Ankylosis |
ankylosis | noun (n.) Stiffness or fixation of a joint; formation of a stiff joint. |
| noun (n.) The union of two or more separate bones to from a single bone; the close union of bones or other structures in various animals. |
| noun (n.) Same as Anchylosis. |
anthesis | noun (n.) The period or state of full expansion in a flower. |
anthropomorphosis | noun (n.) Transformation into the form of a human being. |
antimetathesis | noun (n.) An antithesis in which the members are repeated in inverse order. |
antiptosis | noun (n.) The putting of one case for another. |
antipyresis | noun (n.) The condition or state of being free from fever. |
antithesis | noun (n.) An opposition or contrast of words or sentiments occurring in the same sentence; as, "The prodigal robs his heir; the miser robs himself." "He had covertly shot at Cromwell; he how openly aimed at the Queen." |
| noun (n.) The second of two clauses forming an antithesis. |
| noun (n.) Opposition; contrast. |
aparithmesis | noun (n.) Enumeration of parts or particulars. |
aphaeresis | noun (n.) Same as Apheresis. |
apheresis | noun (n.) The dropping of a letter or syllable from the beginning of a word; e. g., cute for acute. |
| noun (n.) An operation by which any part is separated from the rest. |
aphesis | noun (n.) The loss of a short unaccented vowel at the beginning of a word; -- the result of a phonetic process; as, squire for esquire. |
apodosis | noun (n.) The consequent clause or conclusion in a conditional sentence, expressing the result, and thus distinguished from the protasis or clause which expresses a condition. Thus, in the sentence, "Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him," the former clause is the protasis, and the latter the apodosis. |
aponeurosis | noun (n.) Any one of the thicker and denser of the deep fasciae which cover, invest, and the terminations and attachments of, many muscles. They often differ from tendons only in being flat and thin. See Fascia. |
apophysis | noun (n.) A marked prominence or process on any part of a bone. |
| noun (n.) An enlargement at the top of a pedicel or stem, as seen in certain mosses. |
aposiopesis | noun (n.) A figure of speech in which the speaker breaks off suddenly, as if unwilling or unable to state what was in his mind; as, "I declare to you that his conduct -- but I can not speak of that, here." |
apotheosis | noun (n. pl.) The act of elevating a mortal to the rank of, and placing him among, "the gods;" deification. |
| noun (n. pl.) Glorification; exaltation. |
apothesis | noun (n.) A place on the south side of the chancel in the primitive churches, furnished with shelves, for books, vestments, etc. |
| noun (n.) A dressing room connected with a public bath. |
apsis | noun (n.) One of the two points of an orbit, as of a planet or satellite, which are at the greatest and least distance from the central body, corresponding to the aphelion and perihelion of a planet, or to the apogee and perigee of the moon. The more distant is called the higher apsis; the other, the lower apsis; and the line joining them, the line of apsides. |
| noun (n.) In a curve referred to polar coordinates, any point for which the radius vector is a maximum or minimum. |
| noun (n.) Same as Apse. |
archebiosis | noun (n.) The origination of living matter from non-living. See Abiogenesis. |
arsis | noun (n.) That part of a foot where the ictus is put, or which is distinguished from the rest (known as the thesis) of the foot by a greater stress of voice. |
| noun (n.) That elevation of voice now called metrical accentuation, or the rhythmic accent. |
| noun (n.) The elevation of the hand, or that part of the bar at which it is raised, in beating time; the weak or unaccented part of the bar; -- opposed to thesis. |
arthrosis | noun (n.) Articulation. |
athetosis | noun (n.) A variety of chorea, marked by peculiar tremors of the fingers and toes. |
atmolysis | noun (n.) The act or process of separating mingled gases of unequal diffusibility by transmission through porous substances. |
autogenesis | noun (n.) Spontaneous generation. |
auxesis | noun (n.) A figure by which a grave and magnificent word is put for the proper word; amplification; hyperbole. |
actinomycosis | noun (n.) A chronic infectious disease of cattle and man due to the presence of Actinomyces bovis. It causes local suppurating tumors, esp. about the jaw. Called also lumpy jaw or big jaw. |
adenosclerosis | noun (n.) The hardening of a gland. |
adipolysis | noun (n.) The digestion of fats. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH THANASİS (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 7 Letters (thanasi) - Words That Begins with thanasi:
Rhyming Words According to First 6 Letters (thanas) - Words That Begins with thanas:
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (thana) - Words That Begins with thana:
thanage | noun (n.) The district in which a thane anciently had jurisdiction; thanedom. |
thanatoid | adjective (a.) Deathlike; resembling death. |
thanatology | noun (n.) A description, or the doctrine, of death. |
thanatopsis | noun (n.) A view of death; a meditation on the subject of death. |
thana | noun (n.) A police station. |
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (than) - Words That Begins with than:
thane | noun (n.) A dignitary under the Anglo-Saxons and Danes in England. Of these there were two orders, the king's thanes, who attended the kings in their courts and held lands immediately of them, and the ordinary thanes, who were lords of manors and who had particular jurisdiction within their limits. After the Conquest, this title was disused, and baron took its place. |
thanedom | noun (n.) The property or jurisdiction of a thane; thanage. |
thanehood | noun (n.) The character or dignity of a thane; also, thanes, collectively. |
thaneship | noun (n.) The state or dignity of a thane; thanehood; also, the seignioralty of a thane. |
thank | noun (n.) A expression of gratitude; an acknowledgment expressive of a sense of favor or kindness received; obligation, claim, or desert, or gratitude; -- now generally used in the plural. |
| noun (n.) To express gratitude to (anyone) for a favor; to make acknowledgments to (anyone) for kindness bestowed; -- used also ironically for blame. |
thanking | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Thank |
thankful | adjective (a.) Obtaining or deserving thanks; thankworthy. |
| adjective (a.) Impressed with a sense of kindness received, and ready to acknowledge it; grateful. |
thankless | adjective (a.) Not acknowledging favors; not expressing thankfulness; unthankful; ungrateful. |
| adjective (a.) Not obtaining or deserving thanks; unacceptable; as, a thankless task. |
thanksgiver | noun (n.) One who gives thanks, or acknowledges a kindness. |
thanksgiving | noun (n.) The act of rending thanks, or expressing gratitude for favors or mercies. |
| noun (n.) A public acknowledgment or celebration of divine goodness; also, a day set apart for religious services, specially to acknowledge the goodness of God, either in any remarkable deliverance from calamities or danger, or in the ordinary dispensation of his bounties. |
thankworthiness | noun (n.) The quality or state of being thankworthy. |
thankworthy | adjective (a.) Deserving thanks; worthy of gratitude; mreitorious. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (tha) - Words That Begins with tha:
thalamencephalon | noun (n.) The segment of the brain next in front of the midbrain, including the thalami, pineal gland, and pituitary body; the diencephalon; the interbrain. |
thalamic | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to a thalamus or to thalami. |
thalamifloral | adjective (a.) Alt. of Thalamiflorous |
thalamiflorous | adjective (a.) Bearing the stamens directly on the receptacle; -- said of a subclass of polypetalous dicotyledonous plants in the system of De Candolle. |
thalamocoele | noun (n.) The cavity or ventricle of the thalamencephalon; the third ventricle. |
thalamophora | noun (n. pl.) Same as Foraminifera. |
thalamus | noun (n.) A mass of nervous matter on either side of the third ventricle of the brain; -- called also optic thalamus. |
| noun (n.) Same as Thallus. |
| noun (n.) The receptacle of a flower; a torus. |
thalassian | noun (n.) Any sea tortoise. |
thalassic | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the sea; -- sometimes applied to rocks formed from sediments deposited upon the sea bottom. |
thalassinian | noun (n.) Any species of Thalaassinidae, a family of burrowing macrurous Crustacea, having a long and soft abdomen. |
thalassography | noun (n.) The study or science of the life of marine organisms. |
thaler | noun (n.) A German silver coin worth about three shillings sterling, or about 73 cents. |
thalia | noun (n.) That one of the nine Muses who presided over comedy. |
| noun (n.) One of the three Graces. |
| noun (n.) One of the Nereids. |
thaliacea | noun (n. pl.) A division of Tunicata comprising the free-swimming species, such as Salpa and Doliolum. |
thalian | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to Thalia; hence, of or pertaining to comedy; comic. |
thallate | noun (n.) A salt of a hypothetical thallic acid. |
thallene | noun (n.) A hydrocarbon obtained from coal-tar residues, and remarkable for its intense yellowish green fluorescence. |
thallic | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to thallium; derived from, or containing, thallium; specifically, designating those compounds in which the element has a higher valence as contrasted with the thallous compounds; as, thallic oxide. |
thalline | noun (n.) An artificial alkaloid of the quinoline series, obtained as a white crystalline substance, C10H13NO, whose salts are valuable as antipyretics; -- so called from the green color produced in its solution by certain oxidizing agents. |
| adjective (a.) Consisting of a thallus. |
thallious | adjective (a.) See Thallous. |
thallium | noun (n.) A rare metallic element of the aluminium group found in some minerals, as certain pyrites, and also in the lead-chamber deposit in the manufacture of sulphuric acid. It is isolated as a heavy, soft, bluish white metal, easily oxidized in moist air, but preserved by keeping under water. Symbol Tl. Atomic weight 203.7. |
thallogen | noun (n.) One of a large class or division of the vegetable kingdom, which includes those flowerless plants, such as fungi, algae, and lichens, that consist of a thallus only, composed of cellular tissue, or of a congeries of cells, or even of separate cells, and never show a distinction into root, stem, and leaf. |
thalloid | adjective (a.) Resembling, or consisting of, thallus. |
thallophyte | noun (n.) Same as Thallogen. |
| noun (n.) A plant belonging to the Thallophyta. |
thallous | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to thallium; derived from, or containing, thallium; specifically, designating those compounds in which the element has a lower valence as contrasted with the thallic compounds. |
thallus | noun (n.) A solid mass of cellular tissue, consisting of one or more layers, usually in the form of a flat stratum or expansion, but sometimes erect or pendulous, and elongated and branching, and forming the substance of the thallogens. |
thammuz | noun (n.) Alt. of Tammuz |
thamnophile | noun (n.) A bush shrike. |
thamyn | noun (n.) An Asiatic deer (Rucervus Eldi) resembling the swamp deer; -- called also Eld's deer. |
thar | noun (n.) A goatlike animal (Capra Jemlaica) native of the Himalayas. It has small, flattened horns, curved directly backward. The hair of the neck, shoulders, and chest of the male is very long, reaching to the knees. Called also serow, and imo. |
| verb (v. impersonal, pres.) It needs; need. |
tharms | noun (n. pl.) Twisted guts. |
tharos | noun (n.) A small American butterfly (Phycoides tharos) having the upper surface of the wings variegated with orange and black, the outer margins black with small white crescents; -- called also pearl crescent. |
thatch | noun (n.) Straw, rushes, or the like, used for making or covering the roofs of buildings, or of stacks of hay or grain. |
| noun (n.) A name in the West Indies for several kinds of palm, the leaves of which are used for thatching. |
| noun (n.) To cover with, or with a roof of, straw, reeds, or some similar substance; as, to thatch a roof, a stable, or a stack of grain. |
thatching | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Thatch |
| noun (n.) The act or art of covering buildings with thatch; so as to keep out rain, snow, etc. |
| noun (n.) The materials used for this purpose; thatch. |
thatcher | noun (n.) One who thatches. |
thaught | noun (n.) See Thwart. |
thaumatolatry | noun (n.) Worship or undue admiration of wonderful or miraculous things. |
thaumatrope | noun (n.) An optical instrument or toy for showing the presistence of an impression upon the eyes after the luminous object is withdrawn. |
thaumaturge | noun (n.) A magician; a wonder worker. |
thaumaturgic | adjective (a.) Alt. of Thaumaturgical |
thaumaturgical | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to thaumaturgy; magical; wonderful. |
thaumaturgics | noun (n.) Feats of legerdemain, or magical performances. |
thaumaturgist | noun (n.) One who deals in wonders, or believes in them; a wonder worker. |
thaumaturgus | noun (n.) A miracle worker; -- a title given by the Roman Catholics to some saints. |
thaumaturgy | noun (n.) The act or art of performing something wonderful; magic; legerdemain. |
thave | noun (n.) Same as Theave. |
thawing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Thaw |
thaw | noun (n.) The melting of ice, snow, or other congealed matter; the resolution of ice, or the like, into the state of a fluid; liquefaction by heat of anything congealed by frost; also, a warmth of weather sufficient to melt that which is congealed. |
| verb (v. i.) To melt, dissolve, or become fluid; to soften; -- said of that which is frozen; as, the ice thaws. |
| verb (v. i.) To become so warm as to melt ice and snow; -- said in reference to the weather, and used impersonally. |
| verb (v. i.) Fig.: To grow gentle or genial. |
| verb (v. t.) To cause (frozen things, as earth, snow, ice) to melt, soften, or dissolve. |
thawy | adjective (a.) Liquefying by heat after having been frozen; thawing; melting. |
thallophyta | noun (n. pl.) A phylum of plants of very diverse habit and structure, including the algae, fungi, and lichens. The simpler forms, as many blue-green algae, yeasts, etc., are unicellular and reproduce vegetatively or by means of asexual spores; in the higher forms the plant body is a thallus, which may be filamentous or may consist of plates of cells; it is commonly undifferentiated into stem, leaves, and roots, and shows no distinct tissue systems; the fronds of many algae, however, are modified to serve many of the functions of the above-named organs. Both asexual and sexual reproduction, often of a complex type, occur in these forms. The Thallophyta exist almost exclusively as gametophytes, the sporophyte being absent or rudimentary. By those who do not separate the Myxophyta from the Tallophyta as a distinct phylum the latter is treated as the lowermost group in the vegetable kingdom. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH THANASİS:
English Words which starts with 'tha' and ends with 'sis':
English Words which starts with 'th' and ends with 'is':
themis | noun (n.) The goddess of law and order; the patroness of existing rights. |
thermolysis | noun (n.) The resolution of a compound into parts by heat; dissociation by heat. |
thesis | noun (n.) A position or proposition which a person advances and offers to maintain, or which is actually maintained by argument. |
| noun (n.) Hence, an essay or dissertation written upon specific or definite theme; especially, an essay presented by a candidate for a diploma or degree. |
| noun (n.) An affirmation, or distinction from a supposition or hypothesis. |
| noun (n.) The accented part of the measure, expressed by the downward beat; -- the opposite of arsis. |
| noun (n.) The depression of the voice in pronouncing the syllables of a word. |
| noun (n.) The part of the foot upon which such a depression falls. |
this | adjective (pron. & a.) As a demonstrative pronoun, this denotes something that is present or near in place or time, or something just mentioned, or that is just about to be mentioned. |
| adjective (pron. & a.) As an adjective, this has the same demonstrative force as the pronoun, but is followed by a noun; as, this book; this way to town. |
thlipsis | noun (n.) Compression, especially constriction of vessels by an external cause. |
thoracentesis | noun (n.) The operation of puncturing the chest wall so as to let out liquids contained in the cavity of the chest. |
thrombosis | noun (n.) The obstruction of a blood vessel by a clot formed at the site of obstruction; -- distinguished from embolism, which is produced by a clot or foreign body brought from a distance. |
thermoneurosis | noun (n.) A neurosis caused by exposure to heat. |
| noun (n.) A neurosis causing rise or fall of a body's temperature. |
thermotaxis | noun (n.) The property possessed by protoplasm of moving under the influence of heat. |
| noun (n.) Determination of the direction of locomotion by heat. |
thigmotaxis | noun (n.) The property possessed by living protoplasm of contracting, and thus moving, when touched by a solid or fluid substance. |