MYRON
First name MYRON's origin is Greek. MYRON means "myrrh". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with MYRON below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of myron.(Brown names are of the same origin (Greek) with MYRON and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming MYRON
FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES MYRON AS A WHOLE:
NAMES RHYMING WITH MYRON (According to last letters):
Rhyming Names According to Last 4 Letters (yron) - Names That Ends with yron:
jayron kyron byronRhyming Names According to Last 3 Letters (ron) - Names That Ends with ron:
hebron acheron charon chiron deron audron avaron camaron cameron farron kamron karon modron aaron abarron adron aron baron barron biron bron buiron camron camshron ciceron daron darron delron devron duron efron ephron eron faron ferron jarron jerron kameron kevron kieron leron neron ron sheron taron terron theron therron waldron miron mai-ron veron petron aleron galeron sharon yaron doron garon garron geronRhyming Names According to Last 2 Letters (on) - Names That Ends with on:
afton carnation aedon solon strephon sidon cihuaton nijlon sokanon odion sion accalon dudon pendragon antton erromon gotzon txanton zorion celyddon eburacon mabon bendision alston alton benton burton carelton fenton hamilton harrison histion kenton pierson preston ralstonNAMES RHYMING WITH MYRON (According to first letters):
Rhyming Names According to First 4 Letters (myro) - Names That Begins with myro:
Rhyming Names According to First 3 Letters (myr) - Names That Begins with myr:
myr myra myrah myriam myrla myrna myrtleRhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (my) - Names That Begins with my:
mya myah mychaela mychal mychele mychelle myesha myeshia mykaela mykal myla myleen myleene myles mylnburne mylnric mylo myma mynogan mystee mysti mystique mytraNAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH MYRON:
First Names which starts with 'my' and ends with 'on':
First Names which starts with 'm' and ends with 'n':
ma'mun ma'n mabonagrain mabonaqain mabyn macalpin macartan macauslan macbain macbean macclennan macen macewen macgowan machaon mackaillyn mackinnon macklin macklyn maclachlan maclaren maclean macmillan macnachtan macnaughton macon macpherson macqueen macsen madailein madalen madalyn madalynn maddalen maddalyn madden maddielynn maddison madelon madelynn madilynn madisen madison madisyn madolen maegan maeghan maeleachlainn maelynn maeveen magan magdalen maggie-lyn mahon maialen maighdlin maimun mainchin mairin makaylyn makeen makin malin malvin malvyn malyn mandalyn mann manon manton maolmin maolruadhan maralyn marchman marden mardon maren marian marilyn marilynn marin marion marlan marleen marlin marlon marlyn marlynn marmion marnin marsden marsten marston martainn martin martyn marven marvin marvyn marwanEnglish Words Rhyming MYRON
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES MYRON AS A WHOLE:
myronic | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or obtained from, mustard; -- used specifically to designate a glucoside called myronic acid, found in mustard seed. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH MYRON (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (yron) - English Words That Ends with yron:
gyron | noun (n.) A subordinary of triangular form having one of its angles at the fess point and the opposite aide at the edge of the escutcheon. When there is only one gyron on the shield it is bounded by two lines drawn from the fess point, one horizontally to the dexter side, and one to the dexter chief corner. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (ron) - English Words That Ends with ron:
acheron | noun (n.) A river in the Nether World or infernal regions; also, the infernal regions themselves. By some of the English poets it was supposed to be a flaming lake or gulf. |
almendron | noun (n.) The lofty Brazil-nut tree. |
anatron | noun (n.) Native carbonate of soda; natron. |
noun (n.) Glass gall or sandiver. | |
noun (n.) Saltpeter. |
andiron | noun (n.) A utensil for supporting wood when burning in a fireplace, one being placed on each side; a firedog; as, a pair of andirons. |
andron | noun (n.) The apartment appropriated for the males. This was in the lower part of the house. |
apastron | noun (n.) That point in the orbit of a double star where the smaller star is farthest from its primary. |
apron | noun (n.) An article of dress, of cloth, leather, or other stuff, worn on the fore part of the body, to keep the clothes clean, to defend them from injury, or as a covering. It is commonly tied at the waist by strings. |
noun (n.) Something which by its shape or use suggests an apron; | |
noun (n.) The fat skin covering the belly of a goose or duck. | |
noun (n.) A piece of leather, or other material, to be spread before a person riding on an outside seat of a vehicle, to defend him from the rain, snow, or dust; a boot. | |
noun (n.) A leaden plate that covers the vent of a cannon. | |
noun (n.) A piece of carved timber, just above the foremost end of the keel. | |
noun (n.) A platform, or flooring of plank, at the entrance of a dock, against which the dock gates are shut. | |
noun (n.) A flooring of plank before a dam to cause the water to make a gradual descent. | |
noun (n.) The piece that holds the cutting tool of a planer. | |
noun (n.) A strip of lead which leads the drip of a wall into a gutter; a flashing. | |
noun (n.) The infolded abdomen of a crab. |
archenteron | noun (n.) The primitive enteron or undifferentiated digestive sac of a gastrula or other embryo. See Illust. under Invagination. |
aileron | noun (n.) A half gable, as at the end of a penthouse or of the aisle of a church. |
noun (n.) A small plane or surface capable of being manipulated by the pilot of a flying machine to preserve or destroy lateral balance; a hinged wing tip; a lateral stabilizing or balancing plane. |
baron | noun (n.) A title or degree of nobility; originally, the possessor of a fief, who had feudal tenants under him; in modern times, in France and Germany, a nobleman next in rank below a count; in England, a nobleman of the lowest grade in the House of Lords, being next below a viscount. |
noun (n.) A husband; as, baron and feme, husband and wife. |
beakiron | noun (n.) A bickern; a bench anvil with a long beak, adapted to reach the interior surface of sheet metal ware; the horn of an anvil. |
boron | noun (n.) A nonmetallic element occurring abundantly in borax. It is reduced with difficulty to the free state, when it can be obtained in several different forms; viz., as a substance of a deep olive color, in a semimetallic form, and in colorless quadratic crystals similar to the diamond in hardness and other properties. It occurs in nature also in boracite, datolite, tourmaline, and some other minerals. Atomic weight 10.9. Symbol B. |
caldron | noun (n.) A large kettle or boiler of copper, brass, or iron. [Written also cauldron.] |
catoptron | noun (n.) A reflecting optical glass or instrument; a mirror. |
catopron | noun (n.) See Catopter. |
chaldron | noun (n.) An English dry measure, being, at London, 36 bushels heaped up, or its equivalent weight, and more than twice as much at Newcastle. Now used exclusively for coal and coke. |
chamfron | noun (n.) The frontlet, or head armor, of a horse. |
chaperon | noun (n.) A hood; especially, an ornamental or an official hood. |
noun (n.) A device placed on the foreheads of horses which draw the hearse in pompous funerals. | |
noun (n.) A matron who accompanies a young lady in public, for propriety, or as a guide and protector. | |
verb (v. t.) To attend in public places as a guide and protector; to matronize. |
charon | noun (n.) The son of Erebus and Nox, whose office it was to ferry the souls of the dead over the Styx, a river of the infernal regions. |
chaudron | noun (n.) See Chawdron. |
chauldron | noun (n.) See Chawdron. |
chawdron | noun (n.) Entrails. |
chevron | noun (n.) One of the nine honorable ordinaries, consisting of two broad bands of the width of the bar, issuing, respectively from the dexter and sinister bases of the field and conjoined at its center. |
noun (n.) A distinguishing mark, above the elbow, on the sleeve of a non-commissioned officer's coat. | |
noun (n.) A zigzag molding, or group of moldings, common in Norman architecture. |
chiliahedron | noun (n.) A figure bounded by a thousand plane surfaces |
citron | noun (n.) A fruit resembling a lemon, but larger, and pleasantly aromatic. The thick rind, when candied, is the citron of commerce. |
noun (n.) A citron tree. | |
noun (n.) A citron melon. |
cobiron | noun (n.) An andiron with a knob at the top. |
cascaron | noun (n.) Lit., an eggshell; hence, an eggshell filled with confetti to be thrown during balls, carnivals, etc. |
coelectron | noun (n.) See Electron. |
decahedron | noun (n.) A solid figure or body inclosed by ten plane surfaces. |
decameron | noun (n.) A celebrated collection of tales, supposed to be related in ten days; -- written in the 14th century, by Boccaccio, an Italian. |
deltohedron | noun (n.) A solid bounded by twelve quadrilateral faces. It is a hemihedral form of the isometric system, allied to the tetrahedron. |
diatessaron | noun (n.) The interval of a fourth. |
noun (n.) A continuous narrative arranged from the first four books of the New Testament. | |
noun (n.) An electuary compounded of four medicines. |
dihedron | noun (n.) A figure with two sides or surfaces. |
dodecahedron | noun (n.) A solid having twelve faces. |
duodecahedron | noun (n.) See Dodecahedral, and Dodecahedron. |
dzeron | noun (n.) The Chinese yellow antelope (Procapra gutturosa), a remarkably swift-footed animal, inhabiting the deserts of Central Asia, Thibet, and China. |
ecderon | noun (n.) See Ecteron. |
ecteron | noun (n.) The external layer of the skin and mucous membranes; epithelium; ecderon. |
ekaboron | noun (n.) The name given by Mendelejeff in accordance with the periodic law, and by prediction, to a hypothetical element then unknown, but since discovered and named scandium; -- so called because it was a missing analogue of the boron group. See Scandium. |
electron | noun (n.) Amber; also, the alloy of gold and silver, called electrum. |
() One of those particles, having about one thousandth the mass of a hydrogen atom, which are projected from the cathode of a vacuum tube as the cathode rays and from radioactive substances as the beta rays; -- called also corpuscle. The electron carries (or is) a natural unit of negative electricity, equal to 3.4 x 10-10 electrostatic units. It has been detected only when in rapid motion; its mass, which is electromagnetic, is practically constant at the lesser speeds, but increases as the velocity approaches that of light. Electrons are all of one kind, so far as known, and probably are the ultimate constituents of all atoms. An atom from which an electron has been detached has a positive charge and is called a coelectron. |
elytron | noun (n.) Alt. of Elytrum |
enderon | noun (n.) The deep sensitive and vascular layer of the skin and mucous membranes. |
enheahedron | noun (n.) A figure having nine sides; a nonagon. |
enteron | noun (n.) The whole alimentary, or enteric, canal. |
entoplastron | noun (n.) The median plate of the plastron of turtles; -- called also entosternum. |
ephemeron | noun (n.) One of the ephemeral flies. |
epimeron | noun (n.) In crustaceans: The part of the side of a somite external to the basal joint of each appendage. |
noun (n.) In insects: The lateral piece behind the episternum. |
epiplastron | noun (n.) One of the first pair of lateral plates in the plastron of turtles. |
epoophoron | noun (n.) See Parovarium. |
exametron | noun (n.) An hexameter. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH MYRON (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (myro) - Words That Begins with myro:
myrobalan | noun (n.) Alt. of Myrobolan |
myrobolan | noun (n.) A dried astringent fruit much resembling a prune. It contains tannin, and was formerly used in medicine, but is now chiefly used in tanning and dyeing. Myrobolans are produced by various species of Terminalia of the East Indies, and of Spondias of South America. |
myropolist | noun (n.) One who sells unguents or perfumery. |
myrosin | noun (n.) A ferment, resembling diastase, found in mustard seeds. |
myroxylon | noun (n.) A genus of leguminous trees of tropical America, the different species of which yield balsamic products, among which are balsam of Peru, and balsam of Tolu. The species were formerly referred to Myrospermum. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (myr) - Words That Begins with myr:
myrcia | noun (n.) A large genus of tropical American trees and shrubs, nearly related to the true myrtles (Myrtus), from which they differ in having very few seeds in each berry. |
myriacanthous | adjective (a.) Having numerous spines, as certain fishes. |
myriad | noun (n.) The number of ten thousand; ten thousand persons or things. |
noun (n.) An immense number; a very great many; an indefinitely large number. | |
adjective (a.) Consisting of a very great, but indefinite, number; as, myriad stars. |
myriagram | noun (n.) Alt. of Myriagramme |
myriagramme | noun (n.) A metric weight, consisting of ten thousand grams or ten kilograms. It is equal to 22.046 lbs. avoirdupois. |
myrialiter | noun (n.) Alt. of Myrialitre |
myrialitre | noun (n.) A metric measure of capacity, containing ten thousand liters. It is equal to 2641.7 wine gallons. |
myriameter | noun (n.) Alt. of Myriametre |
myriametre | noun (n.) A metric measure of length, containing ten thousand meters. It is equal to 6.2137 miles. |
myriapod | noun (n.) One of the Myriapoda. |
myriapoda | noun (n. pl.) A class, or subclass, of arthropods, related to the hexapod insects, from which they differ in having the body made up of numerous similar segments, nearly all of which bear true jointed legs. They have one pair of antennae, three pairs of mouth organs, and numerous trachaae, similar to those of true insects. The larvae, when first hatched, often have but three pairs of legs. See Centiped, Galleyworm, Milliped. |
myriarch | noun (n.) A captain or commander of ten thousand men. |
myriare | noun (n.) A measure of surface in the metric system containing ten thousand ares, or one million square meters. It is equal to about 247.1 acres. |
myrica | noun (n.) A widely dispersed genus of shrubs and trees, usually with aromatic foliage. It includes the bayberry or wax myrtle, the sweet gale, and the North American sweet fern, so called. |
myricin | noun (n.) A silky, crystalline, waxy substance, forming the less soluble part of beeswax, and regarded as a palmitate of a higher alcohol of the paraffin series; -- called also myricyl alcohol. |
myricyl | noun (n.) A hypothetical radical regarded as the essential residue of myricin; -- called also melissyl. |
myriological | adjective (a.) Of or relating to a myriologue. |
myriologist | noun (n.) One who composes or sings a myriologue. |
myriologue | noun (n.) An extemporaneous funeral song, composed and sung by a woman on the death of a friend. |
myriophyllous | adjective (a.) Having an indefinitely great or countless number of leaves. |
myriopoda | noun (n. pl.) See Myriapoda. |
myriorama | noun (n.) A picture made up of several smaller pictures, drawn upon separate pieces in such a manner as to admit of combination in many different ways, thus producing a great variety of scenes or landscapes. |
myrioscope | noun (n.) A form of kaleidoscope. |
myristate | noun (n.) A salt of myristic acid. |
myristic | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or derived from, the nutmeg (Myristica). Specifically, designating an acid found in nutmeg oil and otoba fat, and extracted as a white crystalline waxy substance. |
myristin | noun (n.) The myristate of glycerin, -- found as a vegetable fat in nutmeg butter, etc. |
myristone | noun (n.) The ketone of myristic acid, obtained as a white crystalline substance. |
myrmicine | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to Myrmica, a genus of ants including the small house ant (M. molesta), and many others. |
myrmidon | noun (n.) One of a fierce tribe or troop who accompained Achilles, their king, to the Trojan war. |
noun (n.) A soldier or a subordinate civil officer who executes cruel orders of a superior without protest or pity; -- sometimes applied to bailiffs, constables, etc. |
myrmidonian | adjective (a.) Consisting of, or like, myrmidons. |
myrmotherine | adjective (a.) Feeding upon ants; -- said of certain birds. |
myrrh | noun (n.) A gum resin, usually of a yellowish brown or amber color, of an aromatic odor, and a bitter, slightly pungent taste. It is valued for its odor and for its medicinal properties. It exudes from the bark of a shrub of Abyssinia and Arabia, the Balsamodendron Myrrha. The myrrh of the Bible is supposed to have been partly the gum above named, and partly the exudation of species of Cistus, or rockrose. |
myrrhic | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or obtained from, myrrh. |
myrrhine | adjective (a.) Murrhine. |
myrtaceous | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or resembling, a large and important natural order of trees and shrubs (Myrtaceae), of which the myrtle is the type. It includes the genera Eucalyptus, Pimenta, Lechythis, and about seventy more. |
myrtiform | adjective (a.) Resembling myrtle or myrtle berries; having the form of a myrtle leaf. |
myrtle | noun (n.) A species of the genus Myrtus, especially Myrtus communis. The common myrtle has a shrubby, upright stem, eight or ten feet high. Its branches form a close, full head, thickly covered with ovate or lanceolate evergreen leaves. It has solitary axillary white or rosy flowers, followed by black several-seeded berries. The ancients considered it sacred to Venus. The flowers, leaves, and berries are used variously in perfumery and as a condiment, and the beautifully mottled wood is used in turning. |
myrmecophyte | noun (n.) A plant that affords shelter and food to certain species of ants which live in symbiotic relations with it. Special adaptations for this purpose exist; thus, Acacia spadicigera has large hollows thorns, and species of Cecropia have stem cavities. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH MYRON:
English Words which starts with 'my' and ends with 'on':
myelencephalon | noun (n.) The brain and spinal cord; the cerebro-spinal axis; the neuron. Sometimes abbreviated to myelencephal. |
noun (n.) The metencephalon. |
myelon | noun (n.) The spinal cord. (Sometimes abbrev. to myel.) |
mylodon | noun (n.) An extinct genus of large slothlike American edentates, allied to Megatherium. |
mystification | noun (n.) The act of mystifying, or the state of being mystied; also, something designed to, or that does, mystify. |