First Names Rhyming AZURE
English Words Rhyming AZURE
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES AZURE AS A WHOLE:
azure | noun (n.) The lapis lazuli. |
| noun (n.) The clear blue color of the sky; also, a pigment or dye of this color. |
| noun (n.) The blue vault above; the unclouded sky. |
| noun (n.) A blue color, represented in engraving by horizontal parallel lines. |
| adjective (a.) Sky-blue; resembling the clear blue color of the unclouded sky; cerulean; also, cloudless. |
| verb (v. t.) To color blue. |
azured | adjective (a.) Of an azure color; sky-blue. |
azureous | adjective (a.) Of a fine blue color; azure. |
razure | noun (n.) The act of erasing or effacing, or the state of being effaced; obliteration. See Rasure. |
| noun (n.) An erasure; a change made by erasing. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH AZURE (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (zure) - English Words That Ends with zure:
disseizure | noun (n.) Disseizin. |
reseizure | noun (n.) A second seizure; the act of seizing again. |
seizure | noun (n.) The act of seizing, or the state of being seized; sudden and violent grasp or gripe; a taking into possession; as, the seizure of a thief, a property, a throne, etc. |
| noun (n.) Retention within one's grasp or power; hold; possession; ownership. |
| noun (n.) That which is seized, or taken possession of; a thing laid hold of, or possessed. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (ure) - English Words That Ends with ure:
abature | noun (n.) Grass and sprigs beaten or trampled down by a stag passing through them. |
abbreviature | noun (n.) An abbreviation; an abbreviated state or form. |
| noun (n.) An abridgment; a compendium or abstract. |
acclimature | noun (n.) The act of acclimating, or the state of being acclimated. |
acupressure | noun (n.) A mode of arresting hemorrhage resulting from wounds or surgical operations, by passing under the divided vessel a needle, the ends of which are left exposed externally on the cutaneous surface. |
acupuncture | noun (n.) Pricking with a needle; a needle prick. |
| noun (n.) The insertion of needles into the living tissues for remedial purposes. |
| verb (v. t.) To treat with acupuncture. |
adjudicature | noun (n.) Adjudication. |
admixture | noun (n.) The act of mixing; mixture. |
| noun (n.) The compound formed by mixing different substances together. |
| noun (n.) That which is mixed with anything. |
adventure | noun (n.) That which happens without design; chance; hazard; hap; hence, chance of danger or loss. |
| noun (n.) Risk; danger; peril. |
| noun (n.) The encountering of risks; hazardous and striking enterprise; a bold undertaking, in which hazards are to be encountered, and the issue is staked upon unforeseen events; a daring feat. |
| noun (n.) A remarkable occurrence; a striking event; a stirring incident; as, the adventures of one's life. |
| noun (n.) A mercantile or speculative enterprise of hazard; a venture; a shipment by a merchant on his own account. |
| noun (n.) To risk, or hazard; jeopard; to venture. |
| noun (n.) To venture upon; to run the risk of; to dare. |
| verb (v. i.) To try the chance; to take the risk. |
affixture | noun (n.) The act of affixing, or the state of being affixed; attachment. |
agriculture | noun (n.) The art or science of cultivating the ground, including the harvesting of crops, and the rearing and management of live stock; tillage; husbandry; farming. |
alcoholature | noun (n.) An alcoholic tincture prepared with fresh plants. |
allure | noun (n.) Allurement. |
| noun (n.) Gait; bearing. |
| verb (v. t.) To attempt to draw; to tempt by a lure or bait, that is, by the offer of some good, real or apparent; to invite by something flattering or acceptable; to entice; to attract. |
alure | noun (n.) A walk or passage; -- applied to passages of various kinds. |
anfracture | noun (n.) A mazy winding. |
antestature | noun (n.) A small intrenchment or work of palisades, or of sacks of earth. |
aperture | noun (n.) The act of opening. |
| noun (n.) An opening; an open space; a gap, cleft, or chasm; a passage perforated; a hole; as, an aperture in a wall. |
| noun (n.) The diameter of the exposed part of the object glass of a telescope or other optical instrument; as, a telescope of four-inch aperture. |
apiculture | noun (n.) Rearing of bees for their honey and wax. |
aquapuncture | noun (n.) The introduction of water subcutaneously for the relief of pain. |
arboriculture | noun (n.) The cultivation of trees and shrubs, chiefly for timber or for ornamental purposes. |
architecture | noun (n.) The art or science of building; especially, the art of building houses, churches, bridges, and other structures, for the purposes of civil life; -- often called civil architecture. |
| noun (n.) Construction, in a more general sense; frame or structure; workmanship. |
armature | noun (n.) Armor; whatever is worn or used for the protection and defense of the body, esp. the protective outfit of some animals and plants. |
| noun (n.) A piece of soft iron used to connect the two poles of a magnet, or electro-magnet, in order to complete the circuit, or to receive and apply the magnetic force. In the ordinary horseshoe magnet, it serves to prevent the dissipation of the magnetic force. |
| noun (n.) Iron bars or framing employed for the consolidation of a building, as in sustaining slender columns, holding up canopies, etc. |
| noun (n.) That part of a dynamo or electric generator or of an electric motor in which a current is induced by a relatively moving magnetic field. The armature usually consists of a series of coils or groups of insulated conductors surrounding a core of iron. |
armure | noun (n.) Armor. |
| noun (n.) A variety of twilled fabric ribbed on the surface. |
attainture | noun (n.) Attainder; disgrace. |
aventure | noun (n.) Accident; chance; adventure. |
| noun (n.) A mischance causing a person's death without felony, as by drowning, or falling into the fire. |
aviculture | noun (n.) Rearing and care of birds. |
batture | noun (n.) An elevated river bed or sea bed. |
bordure | noun (n.) A border one fifth the width of the shield, surrounding the field. It is usually plain, but may be charged. |
breviature | noun (n.) An abbreviature; an abbreviation. |
brisure | noun (n.) Any part of a rampart or parapet which deviates from the general direction. |
| noun (n.) A mark of cadency or difference. |
calenture | noun (n.) A name formerly given to various fevers occuring in tropics; esp. to a form of furious delirium accompanied by fever, among sailors, which sometimes led the affected person to imagine the sea to be a green field, and to throw himself into it. |
| verb (v. i.) To see as in the delirium of one affected with calenture. |
candidature | noun (n.) Candidacy. |
capillature | noun (n.) A bush of hair; frizzing of the hair. |
capture | noun (n.) The act of seizing by force, or getting possession of by superior power or by stratagem; as, the capture of an enemy, a vessel, or a criminal. |
| noun (n.) The securing of an object of strife or desire, as by the power of some attraction. |
| noun (n.) The thing taken by force, surprise, or stratagem; a prize; prey. |
| verb (v. t.) To seize or take possession of by force, surprise, or stratagem; to overcome and hold; to secure by effort. |
celature | noun (n.) The act or art of engraving or embossing. |
| noun (n.) That which is engraved. |
celsiture | noun (n.) Height; altitude. |
censure | noun (n.) Judgment either favorable or unfavorable; opinion. |
| noun (n.) The act of blaming or finding fault with and condemning as wrong; reprehension; blame. |
| noun (n.) Judicial or ecclesiastical sentence or reprimand; condemnatory judgment. |
| verb (v. i.) To form or express a judgment in regard to; to estimate; to judge. |
| verb (v. i.) To find fault with and condemn as wrong; to blame; to express disapprobation of. |
| verb (v. i.) To condemn or reprimand by a judicial or ecclesiastical sentence. |
| verb (v. i.) To judge. |
chaussure | noun (n.) A foot covering of any kind. |
chevelure | noun (n.) A hairlike envelope. |
cincture | noun (n.) A belt, a girdle, or something worn round the body, -- as by an ecclesiastic for confining the alb. |
| noun (n.) That which encompasses or incloses; an inclosure. |
| noun (n.) The fillet, listel, or band next to the apophyge at the extremity of the shaft of a column. |
ciselure | noun (n.) The process of chasing on metals; also, the work thus chased. |
clausure | noun (n.) The act of shutting up or confining; confinement. |
climature | noun (n.) A climate. |
cloture | noun (n.) See Closure, 5. |
coadventure | noun (n.) An adventure in which two or more persons are partakers. |
| verb (v. i.) To share in a venture. |
cocksure | adjective (a.) Perfectly safe. |
| adjective (a.) Quite certain. |
coiffure | noun (n.) A headdress, or manner of dressing the hair. |
colature | noun (n.) The process of straining; the matter strained; a strainer. |
colorature | noun (n.) Vocal music colored, as it were, by florid ornaments, runs, or rapid passages. |
colure | noun (n.) One of two great circles intersecting at right angles in the poles of the equator. One of them passes through the equinoctial points, and hence is denominated the equinoctial colure; the other intersects the equator at the distance of 90¡ from the former, and is called the solstitial colure. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH AZURE (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (azur) - Words That Begins with azur:
azurine | noun (n.) The blue roach of Europe (Leuciscus caeruleus); -- so called from its color. |
| adjective (a.) Azure. |
azurite | noun (n.) Blue carbonate of copper; blue malachite. |
azurn | adjective (a.) Azure. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (azu) - Words That Begins with azu:
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH AZURE:
English Words which starts with 'az' and ends with 're':