First Names Rhyming ONDRUS
English Words Rhyming ONDRUS
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES ONDRUS AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ONDRUS (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (ndrus) - English Words That Ends with ndrus:
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (drus) - English Words That Ends with drus:
hydrus | noun (n.) A constellation of the southern hemisphere, near the south pole. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (rus) - English Words That Ends with rus:
acarus | noun (n.) A genus including many species of small mites. |
arcturus | noun (n.) A fixed star of the first magnitude in the constellation Bootes. |
birrus | noun (n.) A coarse kind of thick woolen cloth, worn by the poor in the Middle Ages; also, a woolen cap or hood worn over the shoulders or over the head. |
bosporus | noun (n.) A strait or narrow sea between two seas, or a lake and a seas; as, the Bosporus (formerly the Thracian Bosporus) or Strait of Constantinople, between the Black Sea and Sea of Marmora; the Cimmerian Bosporus, between the Black Sea and Sea of Azof. |
brontosaurus | noun (n.) A genus of American jurassic dinosaurs. A length of sixty feet is believed to have been attained by these reptiles. |
camarasaurus | noun (n.) A genus of gigantic American Jurassic dinosaurs, having large cavities in the bodies of the dorsal vertebrae. |
carus | noun (n.) Coma with complete insensibility; deep lethargy. |
ceratosaurus | noun (n.) A carnivorous American Jurassic dinosaur allied to the European Megalosaurus. The animal was nearly twenty feet in length, and the skull bears a bony horn core on the united nasal bones. See Illustration in Appendix. |
cerberus | noun (n.) A monster, in the shape of a three-headed dog, guarding the entrance into the infernal regions, Hence: Any vigilant custodian or guardian, esp. if surly. |
| noun (n.) A genus of East Indian serpents, allied to the pythons; the bokadam. |
chorus | noun (n.) A band of singers and dancers. |
| noun (n.) A company of persons supposed to behold what passed in the acts of a tragedy, and to sing the sentiments which the events suggested in couplets or verses between the acts; also, that which was thus sung by the chorus. |
| noun (n.) An interpreter in a dumb show or play. |
| noun (n.) A company of singers singing in concert. |
| noun (n.) A composition of two or more parts, each of which is intended to be sung by a number of voices. |
| noun (n.) Parts of a song or hymn recurring at intervals, as at the end of stanzas; also, a company of singers who join with the singer or choir in singer or choir in singing such parts. |
| noun (n.) The simultaneous of a company in any noisy demonstration; as, a Chorus of shouts and catcalls. |
| verb (v. i.) To sing in chorus; to exclaim simultaneously. |
churrus | noun (n.) A powerfully narcotic and intoxicating gum resin which exudes from the flower heads, seeds, etc., of Indian hemp. |
cirrus | noun (n.) A tendril or clasper. |
| noun (n.) A soft tactile appendage of the mantle of many Mollusca, and of the parapodia of Annelida. Those near the head of annelids are Tentacular cirri; those of the last segment are caudal cirri. |
| noun (n.) The jointed, leglike organs of Cirripedia. See Annelida, and Polychaeta. |
| noun (n.) The external male organ of trematodes and some other worms, and of certain Mollusca. |
| noun (n.) See under Cloud. |
citrus | noun (n.) A genus of trees including the orange, lemon, citron, etc., originally natives of southern Asia. |
coenurus | noun (n.) The larval stage of a tapeworm (Taenia coenurus) which forms bladderlike sacs in the brain of sheep, causing the fatal disease known as water brain, vertigo, staggers or gid. |
corchorus | noun (n.) The common name of the Kerria Japonica or Japan globeflower, a yellow-flowered, perennial, rosaceous plant, seen in old-fashioned gardens. |
crus | noun (n.) That part of the hind limb between the femur, or thigh, and the ankle, or tarsus; the shank. |
| noun (n.) Often applied, especially in the plural, to parts which are supposed to resemble a pair of legs; as, the crura of the diaphragm, a pair of muscles attached to it; crura cerebri, two bundles of nerve fibers in the base of the brain, connecting the medulla and the forebrain. |
cryophorus | noun (n.) An instrument used to illustrate the freezing of water by its own evaporation. The ordinary form consists of two glass bulbs, connected by a tube of the same material, and containing only a quantity of water and its vapor, devoid of air. The water is in one of the bulbs, and freezes when the other is cooled below 32¡ Fahr. |
cyperus | noun (n.) A large genus of plants belonging to the Sedge family, and including the species called galingale, several bulrushes, and the Egyptian papyrus. |
cyprus | noun (n.) A thin, transparent stuff, the same as, or corresponding to, crape. It was either white or black, the latter being most common, and used for mourning. |
elasmosaurus | noun (n.) An extinct, long-necked, marine, cretaceous reptile from Kansas, allied to Plesiosaurus. |
electrophorus | noun (n.) An instrument for exciting electricity, and repeating the charge indefinitely by induction, consisting of a flat cake of resin, shelllac, or ebonite, upon which is placed a plate of metal. |
eosaurus | noun (n.) An extinct marine reptile from the coal measures of Nova Scotia; -- so named because supposed to be of the earliest known reptiles. |
eurus | noun (n.) The east wind. |
eurypterus | noun (n.) A genus of extinct Merostomata, found in Silurian rocks. Some of the species are more than three feet long. |
gyrus | noun (n.) A convoluted ridge between grooves; a convolution; as, the gyri of the brain; the gyri of brain coral. See Brain. |
hadrosaurus | noun (n.) An American herbivorous dinosaur of great size, allied to the iguanodon. It is found in the Cretaceous formation. |
hesperus | noun (n.) Venus when she is the evening star; Hesper. |
| noun (n.) Evening. |
homarus | noun (n.) A genus of decapod Crustacea, including the common lobsters. |
humerus | noun (n.) The bone of the brachium, or upper part of the arm or fore limb. |
| noun (n.) The part of the limb containing the humerus; the brachium. |
hylaeosaurus | noun (n.) A large Wealden dinosaur from the Tilgate Forest, England. It was about twenty feet long, protected by bony plates in the skin, and armed with spines. |
ichthyosaurus | noun (n.) An extinct genus of marine reptiles; -- so named from their short, biconcave vertebrae, resembling those of fishes. Several species, varying in length from ten to thirty feet, are known from the Liassic, Oolitic, and Cretaceous formations. |
icterus | adjective (a.) The jaundice. |
jeterus | noun (n.) A yellowness of the parts of plants which are normally green; yellows. |
labrus | noun (n.) A genus of marine fishes, including the wrasses of Europe. See Wrasse. |
laurus | noun (n.) A genus of trees including, according to modern authors, only the true laurel (Laurus nobilis), and the larger L. Canariensis of Madeira and the Canary Islands. Formerly the sassafras, the camphor tree, the cinnamon tree, and several other aromatic trees and shrubs, were also referred to the genus Laurus. |
malapterurus | noun (n.) A genus of African siluroid fishes, including the electric catfishes. See Electric cat, under Electric. |
mastodonsaurus | noun (n.) A large extinct genus of labyrinthodonts, found in the European Triassic rocks. |
megalosaurus | noun (n.) A gigantic carnivorous dinosaur, whose fossil remains have been found in England and elsewhere. |
merus | noun (n.) See Meros. |
morosaurus | noun (n.) An extinct genus of large herbivorous dinosaurs, found in Jurassic strata in America. |
morus | noun (n.) A genus of trees, some species of which produce edible fruit; the mulberry. See Mulberry. |
mosasaurus | noun (n.) A genus of extinct marine reptiles allied to the lizards, but having the body much elongated, and the limbs in the form of paddles. The first known species, nearly fifty feet in length, was discovered in Cretaceous beds near Maestricht, in the Netherlands. |
mososaurus | noun (n.) Same as Mosasaurus. |
oestrus | noun (n.) A genus of gadflies. The species which deposits its larvae in the nasal cavities of sheep is oestrus ovis. |
| noun (n.) A vehement desire; esp. (Physiol.), the periodical sexual impulse of animals; heat; rut. |
paleosaurus | noun (n.) A genus of fossil saurians found in the Permian formation. |
palinurus | noun (n.) An instrument for obtaining directly, without calculation, the true bearing of the sun, and thence the variation of the compass |
papyrus | noun (n.) A tall rushlike plant (Cyperus Papyrus) of the Sedge family, formerly growing in Egypt, and now found in Abyssinia, Syria, Sicily, etc. The stem is triangular and about an inch thick. |
| noun (n.) The material upon which the ancient Egyptians wrote. It was formed by cutting the stem of the plant into thin longitudinal slices, which were gummed together and pressed. |
| noun (n.) A manuscript written on papyrus; esp., pl., written scrolls made of papyrus; as, the papyri of Egypt or Herculaneum. |
pentamerus | noun (n.) A genus of extinct Paleozoic brachiopods, often very abundant in the Upper Silurian. |
phoenicopterus | noun (n.) A genus of birds which includes the flamingoes. |
phosphorus | noun (n.) The morning star; Phosphor. |
| noun (n.) A poisonous nonmetallic element of the nitrogen group, obtained as a white, or yellowish, translucent waxy substance, having a characteristic disagreeable smell. It is very active chemically, must be preserved under water, and unites with oxygen even at ordinary temperatures, giving a faint glow, -- whence its name. It always occurs compined, usually in phosphates, as in the mineral apatite, in bones, etc. It is used in the composition on the tips of friction matches, and for many other purposes. The molecule contains four atoms. Symbol P. Atomic weight 31.0. |
| noun (n.) Hence, any substance which shines in the dark like phosphorus, as certain phosphorescent bodies. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ONDRUS (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (ondru) - Words That Begins with ondru:
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (ondr) - Words That Begins with ondr:
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (ond) - Words That Begins with ond:
onde | noun (n.) Hatred; fury; envy. |
ondogram | noun (n.) The record of an ondograph. |
ondograph | noun (n.) An instrument for autographically recording the wave forms of varying currents, esp. rapidly varying alternating currents. |
ondometer | noun (n.) An electric wave meter. |
ondoyant | adjective (a.) Wavy; having the surface marked by waves or slightly depressed furrows; as, ondoyant glass. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH ONDRUS:
English Words which starts with 'on' and ends with 'us':
onagraceous | adjective (a.) Alt. of Onagrarieous |
onagrarieous | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or resembling, a natural order of plants (Onagraceae or Onagrarieae), which includes the fuchsia, the willow-herb (Epilobium), and the evening primrose (/nothera). |
onerous | adjective (a.) Burdensome; oppressive. |
onus | noun (n.) A burden; an obligation. |