First Names Rhyming COSTICA
English Words Rhyming COSTICA
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES COSTÝCA AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH COSTÝCA (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 6 Letters (ostica) - English Words That Ends with ostica:
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (stica) - English Words That Ends with stica:
endoplastica | noun (n. pl.) A group of Rhizopoda having a distinct nucleus, as the am/ba. |
swastica | noun (n.) A symbol or ornament in the form of a Greek cross with the ends of the arms at right angles all in the same direction, and each prolonged to the height of the parallel arm of the cross. A great many modified forms exist, ogee and volute as well as rectilinear, while various decorative designs, as Greek fret or meander, are derived from or closely associated with it. The swastika is found in remains from the Bronze Age in various parts of Europe, esp. at Hissarlik (Troy), and was in frequent use as late as the 10th century. It is found in ancient Persia, in India, where both Jains and Buddhists used (or still use) it as religious symbol, in China and Japan, and among Indian tribes of North, Central, and South America. It is usually thought to be a charm, talisman, or religious token, esp. a sign of good luck or benediction. Max MuLler distinguished from the swastika, with arms prolonged to the right, the suavastika, with arms prolonged to the left, but this distinction is not commonly recognized. Other names for the swastika are fylfot and gammadion. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (tica) - English Words That Ends with tica:
amphibiotica | noun (n. pl.) A division of insects having aquatic larvae. |
dalmatica | noun (n.) Alt. of Dalmatic |
hepatica | noun (n.) A genus of pretty spring flowers closely related to Anemone; squirrel cup. |
| noun (n.) Any plant, usually procumbent and mosslike, of the cryptogamous class Hepaticae; -- called also scale moss and liverwort. See Hepaticae, in the Supplement. |
lectica | noun (n.) A kind of litter or portable couch. |
natica | noun (n.) Any one of numerous species of marine gastropods belonging to Natica, Lunatia, Neverita, and other allied genera (family Naticidae.) They burrow beneath the sand, or mud, and drill other shells. |
sciatica | noun (n.) Neuralgia of the sciatic nerve, an affection characterized by paroxysmal attacks of pain in the buttock, back of the thigh, or in the leg or foot, following the course of the branches of the sciatic nerve. The name is also popularly applied to various painful affections of the hip and the parts adjoining it. See Ischiadic passion, under Ischiadic. |
urtica | noun (n.) A genus of plants including the common nettles. See Nettle, n. |
utica | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or designating, a subdivision of the Trenton Period of the Lower Silurian, characterized in the State of New York by beds of shale. |
venatica | noun (n.) See Vinatico. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (ica) - English Words That Ends with ica:
angelica | noun (n.) An aromatic umbelliferous plant (Archangelica officinalis or Angelica archangelica) the leaf stalks of which are sometimes candied and used in confectionery, and the roots and seeds as an aromatic tonic. |
| noun (n.) The candied leaf stalks of angelica. |
arnica | noun (n.) A genus of plants; also, the most important species (Arnica montana), native of the mountains of Europe, used in medicine as a narcotic and stimulant. |
basilica | noun (n.) Originally, the place of a king; but afterward, an apartment provided in the houses of persons of importance, where assemblies were held for dispensing justice; and hence, any large hall used for this purpose. |
| noun (n.) A building used by the Romans as a place of public meeting, with court rooms, etc., attached. |
| noun (n.) A church building of the earlier centuries of Christianity, the plan of which was taken from the basilica of the Romans. The name is still applied to some churches by way of honorary distinction. |
| noun (n.) A digest of the laws of Justinian, translated from the original Latin into Greek, by order of Basil I., in the ninth century. |
brassica | noun (n.) A genus of plants embracing several species and varieties differing much in appearance and qualities: such as the common cabbage (B. oleracea), broccoli, cauliflowers, etc.; the wild turnip (B. campestris); the common turnip (B. rapa); the rape or coleseed (B. napus), etc. |
chica | noun (n.) A red coloring matter. extracted from the Bignonia Chica, used by some tribes of South American Indians to stain the skin. |
| noun (n.) A fermented liquor or beer made in South American from a decoction of maize. |
| noun (n.) A popular Moorish, Spanish, and South American dance, said to be the original of the fandango, etc. |
erica | noun (n.) A genus of shrubby plants, including the heaths, many of them producing beautiful flowers. |
formica | noun (n.) A Linnaean genus of hymenopterous insects, including the common ants. See Ant. |
harmonica | noun (n.) A musical instrument, consisting of a series of hemispherical glasses which, by touching the edges with the dampened finger, give forth the tones. |
| noun (n.) A toy instrument of strips of glass or metal hung on two tapes, and struck with hammers. |
hydromica | noun (n.) A variety of potash mica containing water. It is less elastic than ordinary muscovite. |
jamaica | noun (n.) One of the West India is islands. |
japonica | noun (n.) A species of Camellia (Camellia Japonica), a native of Japan, bearing beautiful red or white flowers. Many other genera have species of the same name. |
lorica | noun (n.) A cuirass, originally of leather, afterward of plates of metal or horn sewed on linen or the like. |
| noun (n.) Lute for protecting vessels from the fire. |
| noun (n.) The protective case or shell of an infusorian or rotifer. |
majolica | noun (n.) A kind of pottery, with opaque glazing and showy, which reached its greatest perfection in Italy in the 16th century. |
mica | noun (n.) The name of a group of minerals characterized by highly perfect cleavage, so that they readily separate into very thin leaves, more or less elastic. They differ widely in composition, and vary in color from pale brown or yellow to green or black. The transparent forms are used in lanterns, the doors of stoves, etc., being popularly called isinglass. Formerly called also cat-silver, and glimmer. |
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. |
narica | noun (n.) The brown coati. See Coati. |
quica | noun (n.) A small South American opossum (Didelphys quica), native of Guiana and Brazil. It feeds upon insects, small birds, and fruit. |
| noun (n.) A small South American opossum (Didelphys quica), native of Guiana and Brazil. It feeds upon insects, small birds, and fruit. |
pica | noun (n.) The genus that includes the magpies. |
| noun (n.) A vitiated appetite that craves what is unfit for food, as chalk, ashes, coal, etc.; chthonophagia. |
| noun (n.) A service-book. See Pie. |
| noun (n.) A size of type next larger than small pica, and smaller than English. |
polygastrica | noun (n. pl.) The Infusoria. |
replica | noun (v. & n.) A copy of a work of art, as of a picture or statue, made by the maker of the original. |
| noun (v. & n.) Repetition. |
silica | noun (n.) Silicon dioxide, SiO/. It constitutes ordinary quartz (also opal and tridymite), and is artifically prepared as a very fine, white, tasteless, inodorous powder. |
spica | noun (n.) A kind of bandage passing, by successive turns and crosses, from an extremity to the trunk; -- so called from its resemblance to a spike of a barley. |
| noun (n.) A star of the first magnitude situated in the constellation Virgo. |
theorica | noun (n. pl.) Public moneys expended at Athens on festivals, sacrifices, and public entertainments (especially theatrical performances), and in gifts to the people; -- also called theoric fund. |
thoracica | noun (n. pl.) A division of cirripeds including those which have six thoracic segments, usually bearing six pairs of cirri. The common barnacles are examples. |
trica | noun (n.) An apothecium in certain lichens, having a spherical surface marked with spiral or concentric ridges and furrows. |
veronica | noun (n.) A portrait or representation of the face of our Savior on the alleged handkerchief of Saint Veronica, preserved at Rome; hence, a representation of this portrait, or any similar representation of the face of the Savior. Formerly called also Vernacle, and Vernicle. |
| noun (n.) A genus scrophulariaceous plants; the speedwell. See Speedwell. |
vesica | noun (n.) A bladder. |
vomica | noun (n.) An abscess cavity in the lungs. |
| noun (n.) An abscess in any other parenchymatous organ. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH COSTÝCA (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 6 Letters (costic) - Words That Begins with costic:
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (costi) - Words That Begins with costi:
costing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Cost |
costiferous | adjective (a.) Rib-bearing, as the dorsal vertebrae. |
costive | adjective (a.) Retaining fecal matter in the bowels; having too slow a motion of the bowels; constipated. |
| adjective (a.) Reserved; formal; close; cold. |
| adjective (a.) Dry and hard; impermeable; unyielding. |
costiveness | noun (n.) An unnatural retention of the fecal matter of the bowels; constipation. |
| noun (n.) Inability to express one's self; stiffness. |
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (cost) - Words That Begins with cost:
cost | noun (n.) A rib; a side; a region or coast. |
| noun (n.) See Cottise. |
| verb (v. t.) To require to be given, expended, or laid out therefor, as in barter, purchase, acquisition, etc.; to cause the cost, expenditure, relinquishment, or loss of; as, the ticket cost a dollar; the effort cost his life. |
| verb (v. t.) To require to be borne or suffered; to cause. |
| verb (v. t.) The amount paid, charged, or engaged to be paid, for anything bought or taken in barter; charge; expense; hence, whatever, as labor, self-denial, suffering, etc., is requisite to secure benefit. |
| verb (v. t.) Loss of any kind; detriment; pain; suffering. |
| verb (v. t.) Expenses incurred in litigation. |
| (imp. & p. p.) of Cost |
costa | noun (n.) A rib of an animal or a human being. |
| noun (n.) A rib or vein of a leaf, especially the midrib. |
| noun (n.) The anterior rib in the wing of an insect. |
| noun (n.) One of the riblike longitudinal ridges on the exterior of many corals. |
costage | noun (n.) Expense; cost. |
costal | adjective (a.) Pertaining to the ribs or the sides of the body; as, costal nerves. |
| adjective (a.) Relating to a costa, or rib. |
costard | noun (n.) An apple, large and round like the head. |
| noun (n.) The head; -- used contemptuously. |
costardmonger | noun (n.) A costermonger. |
costate | adjective (a.) Alt. of Costated |
costated | adjective (a.) Having ribs, or the appearance of ribs; (Bot.) having one or more longitudinal ribs. |
costeaning | noun (n.) The process by which miners seek to discover metallic lodes. It consist in sinking small pits through the superficial deposits to the solid rock, and then driving from one pit to another across the direction of the vein, in such manner as to cross all the veins between the two pits. |
costellate | adjective (a.) Finely ribbed or costated. |
coster | noun (n.) One who hawks about fruit, green vegetables, fish, etc. |
costermonger | noun (n.) An apple seller; a hawker of, or dealer in, any kind of fruit or vegetables; a fruiterer. |
costless | adjective (a.) Costing nothing. |
costlewe | adjective (a.) Costly. |
costliness | noun (n.) The quality of being costy; expensiveness; sumptuousness. |
costly | adjective (a.) Of great cost; expensive; dear. |
| adjective (a.) Gorgeous; sumptuous. |
costmary | noun (n.) A garden plant (Chrysanthemum Balsamita) having a strong balsamic smell, and nearly allied to tansy. It is used as a pot herb and salad plant and in flavoring ale and beer. Called also alecost. |
costotome | noun (n.) An instrument (chisel or shears) to cut the ribs and open the thoracic cavity, in post-mortem examinations and dissections. |
costrel | noun (n.) A bottle of leather, earthenware, or wood, having ears by which it was suspended at the side. |
costume | noun (n.) Dress in general; esp., the distinctive style of dress of a people, class, or period. |
| noun (n.) Such an arrangement of accessories, as in a picture, statue, poem, or play, as is appropriate to the time, place, or other circumstances represented or described. |
| noun (n.) A character dress, used at fancy balls or for dramatic purposes. |
costumer | noun (n.) One who makes or deals in costumes, as for theaters, fancy balls, etc. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (cos) - Words That Begins with cos:
coscinomancy | noun (n.) Divination by means of a suspended sieve. |
coscoroba | noun (n.) A large, white, South American duck, of the genus Cascoroba, resembling a swan. |
cosecant | noun (n.) The secant of the complement of an arc or angle. See Illust. of Functions. |
cosenage | noun (n.) See Cozenage. |
cosening | noun (n.) Anything done deceitfully, and which could not be properly designated by any special name, whether belonging to contracts or not. |
cosentient | adjective (a.) Perceiving together. |
cosey | adjective (a.) See Cozy. |
cosherer | noun (n.) One who coshers. |
coshering | noun (n.) A feudal prerogative of the lord of the soil entitling him to lodging and food at his tenant's house. |
cosier | noun (n.) A tailor who botches his work. |
cosignificative | adjective (a.) Having the same signification. |
cosignitary | noun (n.) One who signs a treaty or public document along with others or another; as, the cosignitaries of the treaty of Berlin. |
| adjective (a.) Signing some important public document with another or with others; as, a treaty violated by one of the cosignitary powers. |
cosinage | noun (n.) Collateral relationship or kindred by blood; consanguinity. |
| noun (n.) A writ to recover possession of an estate in lands, when a stranger has entered, after the death of the grandfather's grandfather, or other distant collateral relation. |
cosine | noun (n.) The sine of the complement of an arc or angle. See Illust. of Functions. |
cosmetic | noun (n.) Any external application intended to beautify and improve the complexion. |
| adjective (a.) Alt. of Cosmetical |
cosmetical | adjective (a.) Imparting or improving beauty, particularly the beauty of the complexion; as, a cosmetical preparation. |
cosmic | adjective (a.) Alt. of Cosmical |
cosmical | adjective (a.) Pertaining to the universe, and having special reference to universal law or order, or to the one grand harmonious system of things; hence; harmonious; orderly. |
| adjective (a.) Pertaining to the solar system as a whole, and not to the earth alone. |
| adjective (a.) Characteristic of the cosmos or universe; inconceivably great; vast; as, cosmic speed. |
| adjective (a.) Rising or setting with the sun; -- the opposite of acronycal. |
cosmogonal | adjective (a.) Alt. of Cosmogonical |
cosmogonic | adjective (a.) Alt. of Cosmogonical |
cosmogonical | adjective (a.) Belonging to cosmogony. |
cosmogonist | noun (n.) One who treats of the origin of the universe; one versed in cosmogony. |
cosmogony | noun (n.) The creation of the world or universe; a theory or account of such creation; as, the poetical cosmogony of Hesoid; the cosmogonies of Thales, Anaxagoras, and Plato. |
cosmographer | noun (n.) One who describes the world or universe, including the heavens and the earth. |
cosmographic | adjective (a.) Alt. of Cosmographical |
cosmographical | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to cosmography. |
cosmography | noun (n.) A description of the world or of the universe; or the science which teaches the constitution of the whole system of worlds, or the figure, disposition, and relation of all its parts. |
cosmolabe | noun (n.) An instrument resembling the astrolabe, formerly used for measuring the angles between heavenly bodies; -- called also pantacosm. |
cosmolatry | noun (n.) Worship paid to the world. |
cosmoline | noun (n.) A substance obtained from the residues of the distillation of petroleum, essentially the same as vaseline, but of somewhat stiffer consistency, and consisting of a mixture of the higher paraffines; a kind of petroleum jelly. |
cosmological | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to cosmology. |
cosmologist | noun (n.) One who describes the universe; one skilled in cosmology. |
cosmology | noun (n.) The science of the world or universe; or a treatise relating to the structure and parts of the system of creation, the elements of bodies, the modifications of material things, the laws of motion, and the order and course of nature. |
cosmometry | noun (n.) The art of measuring the world or the universe. |
cosmoplastic | adjective (a.) Pertaining to a plastic force as operative in the formation of the world independently of God; world-forming. |
cosmopolitan | noun (n.) Alt. of Cosmopolite |
| adjective (a.) Alt. of Cosmopolite |
cosmopolite | noun (n.) One who has no fixed residence, or who is at home in every place; a citizen of the world. |
| noun (a. & n.) See Cosmopolitan. |
| adjective (a.) Having no fixed residence; at home in any place; free from local attachments or prejudices; not provincial; liberal. |
| adjective (a.) Common everywhere; widely spread; found in all parts of the world. |
cosmopolitanism | noun (n.) The quality of being cosmopolitan; cosmopolitism. |
cosmopolitical | adjective (a.) Having the character of a cosmopolite. |
cosmopolitism | noun (n.) The condition or character of a cosmopolite; disregard of national or local peculiarities and prejudices. |
cosmorama | noun (n.) An exhibition in which a series of views in various parts of the world is seen reflected by mirrors through a series of lenses, with such illumination, etc., as will make the views most closely represent reality. |
cosmoramic | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to a cosmorama. |
cosmos | noun (n.) The universe or universality of created things; -- so called from the order and harmony displayed in it. |
| noun (n.) The theory or description of the universe, as a system displaying order and harmony. |
| noun (n.) A genus of composite plants closely related to Bidens, usually with very showy flowers, some with yellow, others with red, scarlet, purple, white, or lilac rays. They are natives of the warmer parts of America, and many species are cultivated. Cosmos bipinnatus and C. diversifolius are among the best-known species; C. caudatus, of the West Indies, is widely naturalized. |
cosmosphere | noun (n.) An apparatus for showing the position of the earth, at any given time, with respect to the fixed stars. It consist of a hollow glass globe, on which are depicted the stars and constellations, and within which is a terrestrial globe. |
cosmotheism | noun (n.) Same as Pantheism. |
cosmothetic | adjective (a.) Assuming or positing the actual existence or reality of the physical or external world. |
cosovereign | noun (n.) A joint sovereign. |
coss | noun (n.) A Hindoo measure of distance, varying from one and a half to two English miles. |
| noun (n.) A thing (only in phrase below). |
cossack | noun (n.) One of a warlike, pastoral people, skillful as horsemen, inhabiting different parts of the Russian empire and furnishing valuable contingents of irregular cavalry to its armies, those of Little Russia and those of the Don forming the principal divisions. |
cossas | noun (n.) Plain India muslin, of various qualities and widths. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH COSTÝCA:
English Words which starts with 'cos' and ends with 'ica':
English Words which starts with 'co' and ends with 'ca':
coca | noun (n.) The dried leaf of a South American shrub (Erythroxylon Coca). In med., called Erythroxylon. |