DRUCE
First name DRUCE's origin is English. DRUCE means "son of drew". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with DRUCE below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of druce.(Brown names are of the same origin (English) with DRUCE and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming DRUCE
FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES DRUCE AS A WHOLE:
NAMES RHYMING WITH DRUCE (According to last letters):
Rhyming Names According to Last 4 Letters (ruce) - Names That Ends with ruce:
bruceRhyming Names According to Last 3 Letters (uce) - Names That Ends with uce:
glauceRhyming Names According to Last 2 Letters (ce) - Names That Ends with ce:
fenice alarice canace candance circe dice dirce eunice eurydice helice kalonice yohance benoyce prentice lance anstice eustace maurice aleece aleyece alice allyce alyce ance anice annice aviance berenice bernice bernyce brandice brandyce caidance candace candice candyce caprice catrice caydence cherice clarice clemence danice darice delice denice deniece derorice dulce ellice ellyce elyce essence felice florence france galice ganice grace gurice jahnisce janice janiece jayce jeanice jenice jeniece jeyce joyce kadence kadience kaedence kaidance kandace kandice kandyce kaprice katrice kayce kaydance kaydence kaydience lanice loyce lucrece morgance morice pazice ranice ronce shace urice ace brice bryce cace canice chaceNAMES RHYMING WITH DRUCE (According to first letters):
Rhyming Names According to First 4 Letters (druc) - Names That Begins with druc:
Rhyming Names According to First 3 Letters (dru) - Names That Begins with dru:
dru druas drud drudwyn drue drugi drummand drummond drusilla drustRhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (dr) - Names That Begins with dr:
draca dracon dracul draedan drago draguta drake draven dravin drayce dreama dreena drefan drem dreng dreogan drew dreyken dridan driden drina drisana driscol driscoll drishti driske driskell dristan dryden drygedene dryhus dryope drystanNAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH DRUCE:
First Names which starts with 'dr' and ends with 'ce':
First Names which starts with 'd' and ends with 'e':
dace dae daesgesage daine daire daisie dale dalene damae damerae damiane danae dane danele danelle danette daniele danielle danise dannalee dannee dannelle dannie danrelle dantae dante daphne darce darcelle darchelle darcie darelene darelle darence darleane darlene darline darrance darrence daryle darylene daunte dave davide davidsone davie davine davite dawayne dawne dawnelle dawnette dawnielle dayle dayne deane deanne dearbourne debbee debbie debralee dechtere dechtire dedre dee deheune deidre deiene deirdre deke dekle delaine delane delanie delbine delcine delmare delmore delphine demasone demissie dene denelle denise denisse dennie dennise denyse deonne deorwine derebourne derrance desarae desaree desirae desire desiree destanee destine destineeEnglish Words Rhyming DRUCE
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES DRUCE AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH DRUCE (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (ruce) - English Words That Ends with ruce:
pruce | noun (n.) Prussian leather. |
spruce | noun (n.) Neat, without elegance or dignity; -- formerly applied to things with a serious meaning; now chiefly applied to persons. |
noun (n.) Sprightly; dashing. | |
adjective (a.) Any coniferous tree of the genus Picea, as the Norway spruce (P. excelsa), and the white and black spruces of America (P. alba and P. nigra), besides several others in the far Northwest. See Picea. | |
adjective (a.) The wood or timber of the spruce tree. | |
adjective (a.) Prussia leather; pruce. | |
verb (v. t.) To dress with affected neatness; to trim; to make spruce. | |
verb (v. i.) To dress one's self with affected neatness; as, to spruce up. |
truce | noun (n.) A suspension of arms by agreement of the commanders of opposing forces; a temporary cessation of hostilities, for negotiation or other purpose; an armistice. |
noun (n.) Hence, intermission of action, pain, or contest; temporary cessation; short quiet. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (uce) - English Words That Ends with uce:
almuce | noun (n.) Same as Amice, a hood or cape. |
catapuce | noun (n.) Spurge. |
conduce | noun (n.) To lead or tend, esp. with reference to a favorable or desirable result; to contribute; -- usually followed by to or toward. |
verb (v. t.) To conduct; to lead; to guide. |
deuce | noun (n.) Two; a card or a die with two spots; as, the deuce of hearts. |
noun (n.) A condition of the score beginning whenever each side has won three strokes in the same game (also reckoned "40 all"), and reverted to as often as a tie is made until one of the sides secures two successive strokes following a tie or deuce, which decides the game. | |
noun (n.) The devil; a demon. |
douce | adjective (a.) Sweet; pleasant. |
adjective (a.) Sober; prudent; sedate; modest. |
hollandaise sauce | noun (n.) Alt. of Hollandaise |
interduce | noun (n.) An intertie. |
lettuce | noun (n.) A composite plant of the genus Lactuca (L. sativa), the leaves of which are used as salad. Plants of this genus yield a milky juice, from which lactucarium is obtained. The commonest wild lettuce of the United States is L. Canadensis. |
luce | noun (n.) A pike when full grown. |
merluce | noun (n.) The European hake; -- called also herring hake and sea pike. |
muce | noun (n.) See Muse, and Muset. |
prepuce | noun (n.) The foreskin. |
produce | noun (n.) That which is produced, brought forth, or yielded; product; yield; proceeds; result of labor, especially of agricultural labors |
noun (n.) agricultural products. | |
verb (v. t.) To bring forward; to lead forth; to offer to view or notice; to exhibit; to show; as, to produce a witness or evidence in court. | |
verb (v. t.) To bring forth, as young, or as a natural product or growth; to give birth to; to bear; to generate; to propagate; to yield; to furnish; as, the earth produces grass; trees produce fruit; the clouds produce rain. | |
verb (v. t.) To cause to be or to happen; to originate, as an effect or result; to bring about; as, disease produces pain; vice produces misery. | |
verb (v. t.) To give being or form to; to manufacture; to make; as, a manufacturer produces excellent wares. | |
verb (v. t.) To yield or furnish; to gain; as, money at interest produces an income; capital produces profit. | |
verb (v. t.) To draw out; to extend; to lengthen; to prolong; as, to produce a man's life to threescore. | |
verb (v. t.) To extend; -- applied to a line, surface, or solid; as, to produce a side of a triangle. | |
verb (v. i.) To yield or furnish appropriate offspring, crops, effects, consequences, or results. |
puce | adjective (a.) Of a dark brown or brownish purple color. |
reduce | noun (n.) To bring or lead back to any former place or condition. |
noun (n.) To bring to any inferior state, with respect to rank, size, quantity, quality, value, etc.; to diminish; to lower; to degrade; to impair; as, to reduce a sergeant to the ranks; to reduce a drawing; to reduce expenses; to reduce the intensity of heat. | |
noun (n.) To bring to terms; to humble; to conquer; to subdue; to capture; as, to reduce a province or a fort. | |
noun (n.) To bring to a certain state or condition by grinding, pounding, kneading, rubbing, etc.; as, to reduce a substance to powder, or to a pasty mass; to reduce fruit, wood, or paper rags, to pulp. | |
noun (n.) To bring into a certain order, arrangement, classification, etc.; to bring under rules or within certain limits of descriptions and terms adapted to use in computation; as, to reduce animals or vegetables to a class or classes; to reduce a series of observations in astronomy; to reduce language to rules. | |
noun (n.) To change, as numbers, from one denomination into another without altering their value, or from one denomination into others of the same value; as, to reduce pounds, shillings, and pence to pence, or to reduce pence to pounds; to reduce days and hours to minutes, or minutes to days and hours. | |
noun (n.) To change the form of a quantity or expression without altering its value; as, to reduce fractions to their lowest terms, to a common denominator, etc. | |
noun (n.) To bring to the metallic state by separating from impurities; hence, in general, to remove oxygen from; to deoxidize; to combine with, or to subject to the action of, hydrogen; as, ferric iron is reduced to ferrous iron; or metals are reduced from their ores; -- opposed to oxidize. | |
noun (n.) To restore to its proper place or condition, as a displaced organ or part; as, to reduce a dislocation, a fracture, or a hernia. |
sauce | noun (n.) A composition of condiments and appetizing ingredients eaten with food as a relish; especially, a dressing for meat or fish or for puddings; as, mint sauce; sweet sauce, etc. |
noun (n.) Any garden vegetables eaten with meat. | |
noun (n.) Stewed or preserved fruit eaten with other food as a relish; as, apple sauce, cranberry sauce, etc. | |
noun (n.) Sauciness; impertinence. | |
noun (n.) A soft crayon for use in stump drawing or in shading with the stump. | |
verb (v. t.) To accompany with something intended to give a higher relish; to supply with appetizing condiments; to season; to flavor. | |
verb (v. t.) To cause to relish anything, as if with a sauce; to tickle or gratify, as the palate; to please; to stimulate; hence, to cover, mingle, or dress, as if with sauce; to make an application to. | |
verb (v. t.) To make poignant; to give zest, flavor or interest to; to set off; to vary and render attractive. | |
verb (v. t.) To treat with bitter, pert, or tart language; to be impudent or saucy to. |
souce | noun (n.) See 1st Souse. |
verb (v. t. & i.) See Souse. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH DRUCE (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (druc) - Words That Begins with druc:
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (dru) - Words That Begins with dru:
drubbing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Drub |
drub | noun (n.) A blow with a cudgel; a thump. |
verb (v. t.) To beat with a stick; to thrash; to cudgel. |
drubber | noun (n.) One who drubs. |
drudging | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Drudge |
drudge | noun (n.) One who drudges; one who works hard in servile employment; a mental servant. |
verb (v. i.) To perform menial work; to labor in mean or unpleasant offices with toil and fatigue. | |
verb (v. t.) To consume laboriously; -- with away. |
drudger | noun (n.) One who drudges; a drudge. |
noun (n.) A dredging box. |
drudgery | noun (n.) The act of drudging; disagreeable and wearisome labor; ignoble or slavish toil. |
druery | noun (n.) Courtship; gallantry; love; an object of love. |
drug | noun (n.) A drudge (?). |
noun (n.) Any animal, vegetable, or mineral substance used in the composition of medicines; any stuff used in dyeing or in chemical operations. | |
noun (n.) Any commodity that lies on hand, or is not salable; an article of slow sale, or in no demand. | |
verb (v. i.) To drudge; to toil laboriously. | |
verb (v. i.) To prescribe or administer drugs or medicines. | |
verb (v. t.) To affect or season with drugs or ingredients; esp., to stupefy by a narcotic drug. Also Fig. | |
verb (v. t.) To tincture with something offensive or injurious. | |
verb (v. t.) To dose to excess with, or as with, drugs. |
drugging | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Drug |
drugger | noun (n.) A druggist. |
drugget | noun (n.) A coarse woolen cloth dyed of one color or printed on one side; generally used as a covering for carpets. |
noun (n.) By extension, any material used for the same purpose. |
druggist | noun (n.) One who deals in drugs; especially, one who buys and sells drugs without compounding them; also, a pharmaceutist or apothecary. |
drugster | noun (n.) A druggist. |
druid | noun (n.) One of an order of priests which in ancient times existed among certain branches of the Celtic race, especially among the Gauls and Britons. |
noun (n.) A member of a social and benevolent order, founded in London in 1781, and professedly based on the traditions of the ancient Druids. Lodges or groves of the society are established in other countries. |
druidess | noun (n.) A female Druid; a prophetess. |
druidic | adjective (a.) Alt. of Druidical |
druidical | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or resembling, the Druids. |
druidish | adjective (a.) Druidic. |
druidism | noun (n.) The system of religion, philosophy, and instruction, received and taught by the Druids; the rites and ceremonies of the Druids. |
drum | noun (n.) An instrument of percussion, consisting either of a hollow cylinder, over each end of which is stretched a piece of skin or vellum, to be beaten with a stick; or of a metallic hemisphere (kettledrum) with a single piece of skin to be so beaten; the common instrument for marking time in martial music; one of the pair of tympani in an orchestra, or cavalry band. |
noun (n.) Anything resembling a drum in form | |
noun (n.) A sheet iron radiator, often in the shape of a drum, for warming an apartment by means of heat received from a stovepipe, or a cylindrical receiver for steam, etc. | |
noun (n.) A small cylindrical box in which figs, etc., are packed. | |
noun (n.) The tympanum of the ear; -- often, but incorrectly, applied to the tympanic membrane. | |
noun (n.) One of the cylindrical, or nearly cylindrical, blocks, of which the shaft of a column is composed; also, a vertical wall, whether circular or polygonal in plan, carrying a cupola or dome. | |
noun (n.) A cylinder on a revolving shaft, generally for the purpose of driving several pulleys, by means of belts or straps passing around its periphery; also, the barrel of a hoisting machine, on which the rope or chain is wound. | |
noun (n.) See Drumfish. | |
noun (n.) A noisy, tumultuous assembly of fashionable people at a private house; a rout. | |
noun (n.) A tea party; a kettledrum. | |
verb (v. i.) To beat a drum with sticks; to beat or play a tune on a drum. | |
verb (v. i.) To beat with the fingers, as with drumsticks; to beat with a rapid succession of strokes; to make a noise like that of a beaten drum; as, the ruffed grouse drums with his wings. | |
verb (v. i.) To throb, as the heart. | |
verb (v. i.) To go about, as a drummer does, to gather recruits, to draw or secure partisans, customers, etc,; -- with for. | |
verb (v. t.) To execute on a drum, as a tune. | |
verb (v. t.) (With out) To expel ignominiously, with beat of drum; as, to drum out a deserter or rogue from a camp, etc. | |
verb (v. t.) (With up) To assemble by, or as by, beat of drum; to collect; to gather or draw by solicitation; as, to drum up recruits; to drum up customers. |
drumming | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Drum |
noun (n.) The act of beating upon, or as if upon, a drum; also, the noise which the male of the ruffed grouse makes in spring, by beating his wings upon his sides. |
drumbeat | noun (n.) The sound of a beaten drum; drum music. |
drumfish | noun (n.) Any fish of the family Sciaenidae, which makes a loud noise by means of its air bladder; -- called also drum. |
drumhead | noun (n.) The parchment or skin stretched over one end of a drum. |
noun (n.) The top of a capstan which is pierced with sockets for levers used in turning it. See Illust. of Capstan. |
drumlin | noun (n.) A hill of compact, unstratified, glacial drift or till, usually elongate or oval, with the larger axis parallel to the former local glacial motion. |
drumly | adjective (a.) Turbid; muddy. |
drummer | noun (n.) One whose office is to best the drum, as in military exercises and marching. |
noun (n.) One who solicits custom; a commercial traveler. | |
noun (n.) A fish that makes a sound when caught | |
noun (n.) The squeteague. | |
noun (n.) A California sculpin. | |
noun (n.) A large West Indian cockroach (Blatta gigantea) which drums on woodwork, as a sexual call. |
drumstick | noun (n.) A stick with which a drum is beaten. |
noun (n.) Anything resembling a drumstick in form, as the tibiotarsus, or second joint, of the leg of a fowl. |
drunk | noun (n.) A drunken condition; a spree. |
adjective (a.) Intoxicated with, or as with, strong drink; inebriated; drunken; -- never used attributively, but always predicatively; as, the man is drunk (not, a drunk man). | |
adjective (a.) Drenched or saturated with moisture or liquid. | |
() of Drink | |
(p. p.) of Drink |
drunkard | noun (n.) One who habitually drinks strong liquors immoderately; one whose habit it is to get drunk; a toper; a sot. |
drunkenhead | noun (n.) Drunkenness. |
drunkenness | noun (n.) The state of being drunken with, or as with, alcoholic liquor; intoxication; inebriety; -- used of the casual state or the habit. |
noun (n.) Disorder of the faculties, resembling intoxication by liquors; inflammation; frenzy; rage. |
drunkenship | noun (n.) Alt. of Drunkship |
drunkship | noun (n.) The state of being drunk; drunkenness. |
drupaceous | adjective (a.) Producing, or pertaining to, drupes; having the form of drupes; as, drupaceous trees or fruits. |
drupal | adjective (a.) Drupaceous. |
drupe | noun (n.) A fruit consisting of pulpy, coriaceous, or fibrous exocarp, without valves, containing a nut or stone with a kernel. The exocarp is succulent in the plum, cherry, apricot, peach, etc.; dry and subcoriaceous in the almond; and fibrous in the cocoanut. |
drupel | noun (n.) Alt. of Drupelet |
drupelet | noun (n.) A small drupe, as one of the pulpy grains of the blackberry. |
druse | noun (n.) A cavity in a rock, having its interior surface studded with crystals and sometimes filled with water; a geode. |
noun (n.) One of a people and religious sect dwelling chiefly in the Lebanon mountains of Syria. |
drusy | adjective (a.) Alt. of Drused |
drused | adjective (a.) Covered with a large number of minute crystals. |
druxey | adjective (a.) Alt. of Druxy |
druxy | adjective (a.) Having decayed spots or streaks of a whitish color; -- said of timber. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH DRUCE:
English Words which starts with 'dr' and ends with 'ce':
driftpiece | noun (n.) An upright or curved piece of timber connecting the plank sheer with the gunwale; also, a scroll terminating a rail. |