First Names Rhyming AMIRAH
English Words Rhyming AMIRAH
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES AMİRAH AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH AMİRAH (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (mirah) - English Words That Ends with mirah:
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (irah) - English Words That Ends with irah:
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (rah) - English Words That Ends with rah:
boomorah | noun (n.) A small West African chevrotain (Hyaemoschus aquaticus), resembling the musk deer. |
corah | noun (n.) Plain; undyed; -- applied to Indian silk. |
| noun (n.) Corah silk. |
gerah | noun (n.) A small coin and weight; 1-20th of a shekel. |
hurrah | noun (n.) A cheer; a shout of joy, etc. |
| verb (v. i.) To utter hurrahs; to huzza. |
| verb (v. t.) To salute, or applaud, with hurrahs. |
| (interj.) Alt. of Hurra |
haphtarah | noun (n.) One of the lessons from the Nebiim (or Prophets) read in the Jewish synagogue on Sabbaths, feast days, fasts, and the ninth of Ab, at the end of the service, after the parashoth, or lessons from the Law. Such a practice is evidenced in Luke iv.17 and Acts xiii.15. |
jarrah | noun (n.) The mahoganylike wood of the Australian Eucalyptus marginata. See Eucalyptus. |
sirrah | noun (n.) A term of address implying inferiority and used in anger, contempt, reproach, or disrespectful familiarity, addressed to a man or boy, but sometimes to a woman. In sililoquies often preceded by ah. Not used in the plural. |
surah | noun (n.) A soft twilled silk fabric much used for women's dresses; -- called also surah silk. |
torah | noun (n.) Alt. of Tora |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH AMİRAH (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (amira) - Words That Begins with amira:
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (amir) - Words That Begins with amir:
amir | noun (n.) Emir. |
| noun (n.) One of the Mohammedan nobility of Afghanistan and Scinde. |
| noun (n.) Same as Ameer. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (ami) - Words That Begins with ami:
amia | noun (n.) A genus of fresh-water ganoid fishes, exclusively confined to North America; called bowfin in Lake Champlain, dogfish in Lake Erie, and mudfish in South Carolina, etc. See Bowfin. |
amiability | noun (n.) The quality of being amiable; amiableness; sweetness of disposition. |
amiable | adjective (a.) Lovable; lovely; pleasing. |
| adjective (a.) Friendly; kindly; sweet; gracious; as, an amiable temper or mood; amiable ideas. |
| adjective (a.) Possessing sweetness of disposition; having sweetness of temper, kind-heartedness, etc., which causes one to be liked; as, an amiable woman. |
| adjective (a.) Done out of love. |
amiableness | noun (n.) The quality of being amiable; amiability. |
amianth | noun (n.) See Amianthus. |
amianthiform | adjective (a.) Resembling amianthus in form. |
amianthoid | adjective (a.) Resembling amianthus. |
amianthus | noun (n.) Earth flax, or mountain flax; a soft silky variety of asbestus. |
amic | adjective (a.) Related to, or derived, ammonia; -- used chiefly as a suffix; as, amic acid; phosphamic acid. |
amicability | noun (n.) The quality of being amicable; friendliness; amicableness. |
amicable | adjective (a.) Friendly; proceeding from, or exhibiting, friendliness; after the manner of friends; peaceable; as, an amicable disposition, or arrangement. |
amicableness | noun (n.) The quality of being amicable; amicability. |
amice | noun (n.) A square of white linen worn at first on the head, but now about the neck and shoulders, by priests of the Roman Catholic Church while saying Mass. |
| noun (n.) A hood, or cape with a hood, made of lined with gray fur, formerly worn by the clergy; -- written also amess, amyss, and almuce. |
amide | noun (n.) A compound formed by the union of amidogen with an acid element or radical. It may also be regarded as ammonia in which one or more hydrogen atoms have been replaced by an acid atom or radical. |
amidin | noun (n.) Start modified by heat so as to become a transparent mass, like horn. It is soluble in cold water. |
amido | adjective (a.) Containing, or derived from, amidogen. |
amidogen | noun (n.) A compound radical, NH2, not yet obtained in a separate state, which may be regarded as ammonia from the molecule of which one of its hydrogen atoms has been removed; -- called also the amido group, and in composition represented by the form amido. |
amine | noun (n.) One of a class of strongly basic substances derived from ammonia by replacement of one or more hydrogen atoms by a basic atom or radical. |
amioid | noun (n.) One of the Amioidei. |
| adjective (a.) Like or pertaining to the Amioidei. |
amioidei | noun (n. pl.) An order of ganoid fishes of which Amia is the type. See Bowfin and Ganoidei. |
amiss | noun (n.) A fault, wrong, or mistake. |
| adjective (a.) Wrong; faulty; out of order; improper; as, it may not be amiss to ask advice. |
| adverb (adv.) Astray; faultily; improperly; wrongly; ill. |
amissible | adjective (a.) Liable to be lost. |
amission | noun (n.) Deprivation; loss. |
amity | noun (n.) Friendship, in a general sense, between individuals, societies, or nations; friendly relations; good understanding; as, a treaty of amity and commerce; the amity of the Whigs and Tories. |
amidol | noun (n.) A salt of a diamino phenol, C6H3(OH)(NH2)2, used as a developer. |
amigo | noun (n.) A friend; -- a Spanish term applied in the Philippine Islands to friendly natives. |
aminol | noun (n.) A colorless liquid prepared from herring brine and containing amines, used as a local antiseptic. |
amish | noun (n. pl.) The Amish Mennonites. |
| adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or designating, the followers of Jacob Amman, a strict Mennonite of the 17th century, who even proscribed the use of buttons and shaving as "worldly conformity". There are several branches of Amish Mennonites in the United States. |
amitosis | noun (n.) Cell division in which there is first a simple cleavage of the nucleus without change in its structure (such as the formation of chromosomes), followed by the division of the cytoplasm; direct cell division; -- opposed to mitosis. It is not the usual mode of division, and is believed by many to occur chiefly in highly specialized cells which are incapable of long-continued multiplication, in transitory structures, and in those in early stages of degeneration. |
amitotic | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to amitosis; karyostenotic; -- opposed to mitotic. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH AMİRAH:
English Words which starts with 'am' and ends with 'ah':