First Names Rhyming ATREUS
English Words Rhyming ATREUS
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES ATREUS AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ATREUS (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (treus) - English Words That Ends with treus:
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (reus) - English Words That Ends with reus:
cereus | noun (n.) A genus of plants of the Cactus family. They are natives of America, from California to Chili. |
choreus | noun (n.) Alt. of Choree |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (eus) - English Words That Ends with eus:
aculeus | noun (n.) A prickle growing on the bark, as in some brambles and roses. |
| noun (n.) A sting. |
alveus | noun (n.) The channel of a river. |
anconeus | noun (n.) A muscle of the elbow and forearm. |
archeus | noun (n.) The vital principle or force which (according to the Paracelsians) presides over the growth and continuation of living beings; the anima mundi or plastic power of the old philosophers. |
caduceus | noun (n.) The official staff or wand of Hermes or Mercury, the messenger of the gods. It was originally said to be a herald's staff of olive wood, but was afterwards fabled to have two serpents coiled about it, and two wings at the top. |
cepheus | noun (n.) A northern constellation near the pole. Its head, which is in the Milky Way, is marked by a triangle formed by three stars of the fourth magnitude. See Cassiopeia. |
clypeus | noun (n.) The frontal plate of the head of an insect. |
coccosteus | noun (n.) An extinct genus of Devonian ganoid fishes, having the broad plates about the head studded with berrylike tubercles. |
coleus | noun (n.) A plant of several species of the Mint family, cultivated for its bright-colored or variegated leaves. |
corypheus | noun (n.) The conductor, chief, or leader of the dramatic chorus; hence, the chief or leader of a party or interest. |
glutaeus | noun (n.) The great muscle of the buttock in man and most mammals, and the corresponding muscle in many lower animals. |
gluteus | noun (n.) Same as Glut/us. |
ileus | noun (n.) A morbid condition due to intestinal obstruction. It is characterized by complete constipation, with griping pains in the abdomen, which is greatly distended, and in the later stages by vomiting of fecal matter. Called also ileac, / iliac, passion. |
malleus | noun (n.) The outermost of the three small auditory bones, ossicles; the hammer. It is attached to the tympanic membrane by a long process, the handle or manubrium. See Illust. of Far. |
| noun (n.) One of the hard lateral pieces of the mastax of Rotifera. See Mastax. |
| noun (n.) A genus of bivalve shells; the hammer shell. |
morpheus | noun (n.) The god of dreams. |
nucleus | noun (n.) A kernel; hence, a central mass or point about which matter is gathered, or to which accretion is made; the central or material portion; -- used both literally and figuratively. |
| noun (n.) The body or the head of a comet. |
| noun (n.) An incipient ovule of soft cellular tissue. |
| noun (n.) A whole seed, as contained within the seed coats. |
| noun (n.) A body, usually spheroidal, in a cell or a protozoan, distinguished from the surrounding protoplasm by a difference in refrangibility and in behavior towards chemical reagents. It is more or less protoplasmic, and consists of a clear fluid (achromatin) through which extends a network of fibers (chromatin) in which may be suspended a second rounded body, the nucleolus (see Nucleoplasm). See Cell division, under Division. |
| noun (n.) The tip, or earliest part, of a univalve or bivalve shell. |
| noun (n.) The central part around which additional growths are added, as of an operculum. |
| noun (n.) A visceral mass, containing the stomach and other organs, in Tunicata and some mollusks. |
orpheus | noun (n.) The famous mythic Thracian poet, son of the Muse Calliope, and husband of Eurydice. He is reputed to have had power to entrance beasts and inanimate objects by the music of his lyre. |
paranucleus | noun (n.) Some as Nucleolus. |
perseus | noun (n.) A Grecian legendary hero, son of Jupiter and Danae, who slew the Gorgon Medusa. |
| noun (n.) A consellation of the northern hemisphere, near Taurus and Cassiopea. It contains a star cluster visible to the naked eye as a nebula. |
pileus | noun (n.) A kind of skull cap of felt. |
| noun (n.) The expanded upper portion of many of the fungi. See Mushroom. |
| noun (n.) The top of the head of a bird, from the bill to the nape. |
pluteus | noun (n.) The free-swimming larva of sea urchins and ophiurans, having several long stiff processes inclosing calcareous rods. |
prometheus | noun (n.) The son of Iapetus (one of the Titans) and Clymene, fabled by the poets to have surpassed all mankind in knowledge, and to have formed men of clay to whom he gave life by means of fire stolen from heaven. Jupiter, being angry at this, sent Mercury to bind Prometheus to Mount Caucasus, where a vulture preyed upon his liver. |
pronucleus | noun (n.) One of the two bodies or nuclei (called male and female pronuclei) which unite to form the first segmentation nucleus of an impregnated ovum. |
proteus | noun (n.) A sea god in the service of Neptune who assumed different shapes at will. Hence, one who easily changes his appearance or principles. |
| noun (n.) A genus of aquatic eel-shaped amphibians found in caves in Austria. They have permanent external gills as well as lungs. The eyes are small and the legs are weak. |
| noun (n.) A changeable protozoan; an amoeba. |
reflueus | adjective (a.) Refluent. |
scarabaeus | noun (n.) Same as Scarab. |
| noun (n.) A conventionalized representation of a beetle, with its legs held closely at its sides, carved in natural or made in baked clay, and commonly having an inscription on the flat underside. |
trinucleus | noun (n.) A genus of Lower Silurian trilobites in which the glabella and cheeks form three rounded elevations on the head. |
uraeus | noun (n.) A serpent, or serpent's head and neck, represented on the front of the headdresses of divinities and sovereigns as an emblem of supreme power. |
zeus | noun (n.) The chief deity of the Greeks, and ruler of the upper world (cf. Hades). He was identified with Jupiter. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ATREUS (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (atreu) - Words That Begins with atreu:
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (atre) - Words That Begins with atre:
atresia | noun (n.) Absence or closure of a natural passage or channel of the body; imperforation. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (atr) - Words That Begins with atr:
atrabilarian | noun (n.) A person much given to melancholy; a hypochondriac. |
| adjective (a.) Alt. of Atrabilarious |
atrabilarious | adjective (a.) Affected with melancholy; atrabilious. |
atrabiliar | adjective (a.) Melancholy; atrabilious. |
atrabiliary | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to atra bilis or black bile, a fluid formerly supposed to be produced by the kidneys. |
| adjective (a.) Melancholic or hypohondriac; atrabilious; -- from the supposed predominance of black bile, to the influence of which the ancients attributed hypochondria, melancholy, and mania. |
atrabilious | adjective (a.) Melancholic or hypochondriac; atrabiliary. |
atramentaceous | adjective (a.) Black, like ink; inky; atramental. |
atramental | adjective (a.) Alt. of Atramentous |
atramentous | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to ink; inky; black, like ink; as, atramental galls; atramentous spots. |
atramentarious | adjective (a.) Like ink; suitable for making ink. Sulphate of iron (copperas, green vitriol) is called atramentarious, as being used in making ink. |
atrial | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to an atrium. |
atrium | noun (n.) A square hall lighted from above, into which rooms open at one or more levels. |
| noun (n.) An open court with a porch or gallery around three or more sides; especially at the entrance of a basilica or other church. The name was extended in the Middle Ages to the open churchyard or cemetery. |
| noun (n.) The main part of either auricle of the heart as distinct from the auricular appendix. Also, the whole articular portion of the heart. |
| noun (n.) A cavity in ascidians into which the intestine and generative ducts open, and which also receives the water from the gills. See Ascidioidea. |
| noun (n.) A cavity, entrance, or passage; as, the atrium, or atrial cavity, in the body wall of the amphioxus; an atrium of the infundibula of the lungs, etc. |
atrocha | noun (n.) A kind of chaetopod larva in which no circles of cilia are developed. |
atrocious | adjective (a.) Extremely heinous; full of enormous wickedness; as, atrocious quilt or deeds. |
| adjective (a.) Characterized by, or expressing, great atrocity. |
| adjective (a.) Very grievous or violent; terrible; as, atrocious distempers. |
atrocity | noun (n.) Enormous wickedness; extreme heinousness or cruelty. |
| noun (n.) An atrocious or extremely cruel deed. |
atrophic | adjective (a.) Relating to atrophy. |
atrophied | adjective (p. a.) Affected with atrophy, as a tissue or organ; arrested in development at a very early stage; rudimentary. |
| (p. p.) of Atrophy |
atrophy | noun (n.) A wasting away from want of nourishment; diminution in bulk or slow emaciation of the body or of any part. |
| verb (v. t.) To cause to waste away or become abortive; to starve or weaken. |
| verb (v. i.) To waste away; to dwindle. |
atropia | noun (n.) Same as Atropine. |
atropine | noun (n.) A poisonous, white, crystallizable alkaloid, extracted from the Atropa belladonna, or deadly nightshade, and the Datura Stramonium, or thorn apple. It is remarkable for its power in dilating the pupil of the eye. Called also daturine. |
atropism | noun (n.) A condition of the system produced by long use of belladonna. |
atropous | adjective (a.) Not inverted; orthotropous. |
atrous | adjective (a.) Coal-black; very black. |
atrypa | noun (n.) A extinct genus of Branchiopoda, very common in Silurian limestones. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH ATREUS:
English Words which starts with 'at' and ends with 'us':
athalamous | adjective (a.) Not furnished with shields or beds for the spores, as the thallus of certain lichens. |
atheous | adjective (a.) Atheistic; impious. |
| adjective (a.) Without God, neither accepting nor denying him. |
athermanous | adjective (a.) Not transmitting heat; -- opposed to diathermanous. |
athermous | adjective (a.) Athermanous. |
atheromatous | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or having the nature of, atheroma. |
atokous | adjective (a.) Producing only asexual individuals, as the eggs of certain annelids. |
attiguous | adjective (a.) Touching; bordering; contiguous. |
attritus | noun (n.) Matter pulverized by attrition. |