PIUS
First name PIUS's origin is Europe. PIUS means "pious". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with PIUS below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of pius.(Brown names are of the same origin (Europe) with PIUS and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming PIUS
FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES PİUS AS A WHOLE:
aesculapiusNAMES RHYMING WITH PİUS (According to last letters):
Rhyming Names According to Last 3 Letters (ius) - Names That Ends with ius:
iasius ambrosius basilius bonifacius cecilius clementius egidius eugenius eustatius darius guiderius marsilius acrisius anastasius boethius demetrius dionysius dolius epeius erichthonius eusebius gelasius halirrhothius icarius ignatius laius melanthius mezentius nauplius pancratius persius phemius philoetius trophonius marius achaius aurelius brenius cacanisius caius claudius cocidius cornelius darrius julius lucius lueius thaddius flaviusRhyming Names According to Last 2 Letters (us) - Names That Ends with us:
el-nefous enygeus caeneus cestus lotus negus maccus dabbous dassous fanous abdul-quddus boulus butrus yunus dryhus thaddeus bagdemagus brademagus isdernus peredurus britomartus luxovious nemausus ondrus argus batholomeus theodorus horus aldous brutus cassibellaunus lorineus ferragus senapus brus marcus seorus alemannus klaus abderus absyrtus acastus achelous aconteus admetus adrastus aeacus aegeus aegisthus aegyptus aeolusNAMES RHYMING WITH PİUS (According to first letters):
Rhyming Names According to First 3 Letters (piu) - Names That Begins with piu:
Rhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (pi) - Names That Begins with pi:
pia piaras picaworth picford pickford pickworth pierce pierette pierpont pierre pierrel pierrepont pierretta pierrette piers pierson pietra pietro pike pilar pili pimne pin pinabel pinochos piper pipere piperel pippa pippin pippo pirithous pirmin piroska pirro pishachi pista pisti pit pithasthana pitney pittheus pityocamptes pivaneNAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH PİUS:
First Names which starts with 'p' and ends with 's':
palamedes palomydes palsmedes panagiotis pandareos pandarus paris parkins parmis parthenios patroclus pegasus peisistratus peleus pelias pelleas pelles pelops peneus pentheus peredwus pericles perkins perris perseus persis petrus phantasos phelps pheobus philips phillips phillis philoctetes phineas phinees phineus phorbas phorbus phorcys phrixus phylis phyllis plexippus plutus polites polydamas polydeuces polydorus polyeidus polynices polyphemus pontus prasutagus prentiss priapus procrustes proinsias prokopios prometheus protesilaus proteus pslomydes psusennes pules pylades pyramus pyrrhusEnglish Words Rhyming PIUS
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES PİUS AS A WHOLE:
aesculapius | noun (n.) The god of medicine. Hence, a physician. |
esculapius | noun (n.) Same as Aesculapius. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH PİUS (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (ius) - English Words That Ends with ius:
antibacchius | noun (n.) A foot of three syllables, the first two long, and the last short (#). |
apocrisiarius | noun (n.) A delegate or deputy; especially, the pope's nuncio or legate at Constantinople. |
aquarius | noun (n.) The Water-bearer; the eleventh sign in the zodiac, which the sun enters about the 20th of January; -- so called from the rains which prevail at that season in Italy and the East. |
noun (n.) A constellation south of Pegasus. |
bacchius | noun (n.) A metrical foot composed of a short syllable and two long ones; according to some, two long and a short. |
bathybius | noun (n.) A name given by Prof. Huxley to a gelatinous substance found in mud dredged from the Atlantic and preserved in alcohol. He supposed that it was free living protoplasm, covering a large part of the ocean bed. It is now known that the substance is of chemical, not of organic, origin. |
cassius | noun (n.) A brownish purple pigment, obtained by the action of some compounds of tin upon certain salts of gold. It is used in painting and staining porcelain and glass to give a beautiful purple color. Commonly called Purple of Cassius. |
celsius | noun (n.) The Celsius thermometer or scale, so called from Anders Celsius, a Swedish astronomer, who invented it. It is the same as the centigrade thermometer or scale. |
chelidonius | noun (n.) A small stone taken from the gizzard of a young swallow. -- anciently worn as a medicinal charm. |
congius | noun (n.) A liquid measure containing about three quarts. |
noun (n.) A gallon, or four quarts. |
denarius | noun (n.) A Roman silver coin of the value of about fourteen cents; the "penny" of the New Testament; -- so called from being worth originally ten of the pieces called as. |
dochmius | noun (n.) A foot of five syllables (usually / -- -/ -). |
ericius | noun (n.) The Vulgate rendering of the Hebrew word qip/d, which in the "Authorized Version" is translated bittern, and in the Revised Version, porcupine. |
gastrocnemius | noun (n.) The muscle which makes the greater part of the calf of the leg. |
genius | noun (n.) A good or evil spirit, or demon, supposed by the ancients to preside over a man's destiny in life; a tutelary deity; a supernatural being; a spirit, good or bad. Cf. Jinnee. |
noun (n.) The peculiar structure of mind with whoch each individual is endowed by nature; that disposition or aptitude of mind which is peculiar to each man, and which qualifies him for certain kinds of action or special success in any pursuit; special taste, inclination, or disposition; as, a genius for history, for poetry, or painting. | |
noun (n.) Peculiar character; animating spirit, as of a nation, a religion, a language. | |
noun (n.) Distinguished mental superiority; uncommon intellectual power; especially, superior power of invention or origination of any kind, or of forming new combinations; as, a man of genius. | |
noun (n.) A man endowed with uncommon vigor of mind; a man of superior intellectual faculties; as, Shakespeare was a rare genius. |
gladius | noun (n.) The internal shell, or pen, of cephalopods like the squids. |
gordius | noun (n.) A genus of long, slender, nematoid worms, parasitic in insects until near maturity, when they leave the insect, and live in water, in which they deposit their eggs; -- called also hair eel, hairworm, and hair snake, from the absurd, but common and widely diffused, notion that they are metamorphosed horsehairs. |
hyporadius | noun (n.) One of the barbs of the hypoptilum, or aftershaft of a feather. See Feather. |
internuncius | noun (n.) Internuncio. |
medius | noun (n.) The third or middle finger; the third digit, or that which corresponds to it. |
metanauplius | noun (n.) A larval crustacean in a stage following the nauplius, and having about seven pairs of appendages. |
modius | noun (n.) A dry measure, containing about a peck. |
nauplius | noun (n.) A crustacean larva having three pairs of locomotive organs (corresponding to the antennules, antennae, and mandibles), a median eye, and little or no segmentation of the body. |
nonius | noun (n.) A vernier. |
nuncius | noun (n.) A messenger. |
noun (n.) The information communicated. |
polygordius | noun (n.) A genus of marine annelids, believed to be an ancient or ancestral type. It is remarkable for its simplicity of structure and want of parapodia. It is the type of the order Archiannelida, or Gymnotoma. See Loeven's larva. |
radius | noun (n.) A right line drawn or extending from the center of a circle to the periphery; the semidiameter of a circle or sphere. |
noun (n.) The preaxial bone of the forearm, or brachium, corresponding to the tibia of the hind limb. See Illust. of Artiodactyla. | |
noun (n.) A ray, or outer floret, of the capitulum of such plants as the sunflower and the daisy. See Ray, 2. | |
noun (n.) The barbs of a perfect feather. | |
noun (n.) Radiating organs, or color-markings, of the radiates. | |
noun (n.) The movable limb of a sextant or other angular instrument. |
regius | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to a king; royal. |
retiarius | noun (n.) A gladiator armed with a net for entangling his adversary and a trident for despatching him. |
sagittarius | noun (n.) The ninth of the twelve signs of the zodiac, which the sun enters about November 22, marked thus [/] in almanacs; the Archer. |
noun (n.) A zodiacal constellation, represented on maps and globes as a centaur shooting an arrow. |
sardius | noun (n.) A precious stone, probably a carnelian, one of which was set in Aaron's breastplate. |
sartorius | noun (n.) A muscle of the thigh, called the tailor's muscle, which arises from the hip bone and is inserted just below the knee. So named because its contraction was supposed to produce the position of the legs assumed by the tailor in sitting. |
serpentarius | noun (n.) A constellation on the equator, lying between Scorpio and Hercules; -- called also Ophiuchus. |
sirius | noun (n.) The Dog Star. See Dog Star. |
splenius | noun (n.) A flat muscle of the back of the neck. |
tarsius | noun (n.) A genus of nocturnal lemurine mammals having very large eyes and ears, a long tail, and very long proximal tarsal bones; -- called also malmag, spectral lemur, podji, and tarsier. |
xiphius | noun (n.) A genus of cetaceans having a long, pointed, bony beak, usually two tusklike teeth in the lower jaw, but no teeth in the upper jaw. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH PİUS (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (piu) - Words That Begins with piu:
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH PİUS:
English Words which starts with 'p' and ends with 's':
paas | noun (n.) Pace |
noun (n.) The Easter festival. |
pabulous | adjective (a.) Affording pabulum, or food; alimental. |
pachycarpous | adjective (a.) Having the pericarp thick. |
pachydactylous | adjective (a.) Having thick toes. |
pachydermatous | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the pachyderms. |
adjective (a.) Thick-skinned; not sensitive to ridicule. |
pachymeningitis | noun (n.) Inflammation of the dura mater or outer membrane of the brain. |
pacos | noun (n.) Same as Alpaca. |
noun (n.) An earthy-looking ore, consisting of brown oxide of iron with minute particles of native silver. |
pactitious | adjective (a.) Setted by a pact, or agreement. |
paducahs | noun (n. pl.) See Comanches. |
paedogenesis | noun (n.) Reproduction by young or larval animals. |
pahutes | noun (n. pl.) See Utes. |
paideutics | noun (n.) The science or art of teaching. |
painless | adjective (a.) Free from pain; without pain. |
pains | noun (n.) Labor; toilsome effort; care or trouble taken; -- plural in form, but used with a singular or plural verb, commonly the former. |
paintless | adjective (a.) Not capable of being painted or described. |
pais | noun (n.) The country; the people of the neighborhood. |
palacious | adjective (a.) Palatial. |
palatableness | noun (n.) The quality or state of being agreeable to the taste; relish; acceptableness. |
palatonares | noun (n. pl.) The posterior nares. See Nares. |
paleaceous | adjective (a.) Chaffy; resembling or consisting of paleae, or chaff; furnished with chaff; as, a paleaceous receptacle. |
paleichthyes | noun (n. pl.) A comprehensive division of fishes which includes the elasmobranchs and ganoids. |
paleness | noun (n.) The quality or condition of being pale; want of freshness or ruddiness; a sickly whiteness; lack of color or luster; wanness. |
paleosaurus | noun (n.) A genus of fossil saurians found in the Permian formation. |
paleous | adjective (a.) Chaffy; like chaff; paleaceous. |
palingenesis | noun (n.) Alt. of Palingenesy |
palinurus | noun (n.) An instrument for obtaining directly, without calculation, the true bearing of the sun, and thence the variation of the compass |
palladious | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or containing, palladium; -- used specifically to designate those compounds in which palladium has a lower valence as compared with palladic compounds. |
pallas | noun (n.) Pallas Athene, the Grecian goddess of wisdom, called also Athene, and identified, at a later period, with the Roman Minerva. |
pallidness | noun (n.) The quality or state of being pallid; paleness; pallor; wanness. |
palmaceous | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to palms; of the nature of, or resembling, palms. |
palmidactyles | noun (n. pl.) A group of wading birds having the toes webbed, as the avocet. |
palmiferous | adjective (a.) Bearing palms. |
palmipedes | noun (n. pl.) Same as Natatores. |
palpigerous | adjective (a.) Bearing a palpus. |
palpless | adjective (a.) Without a palpus. |
palpus | noun (n.) A feeler; especially, one of the jointed sense organs attached to the mouth organs of insects, arachnids, crustaceans, and annelids; as, the mandibular palpi, maxillary palpi, and labial palpi. The palpi of male spiders serve as sexual organs. Called also palp. See Illust. of Arthrogastra and Orthoptera. |
paltriness | noun (n.) The state or quality of being paltry. |
paludinous | adjective (a.) Paludinal. (b) Like or pertaining to the genus Paludina. |
adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to a marsh or fen. |
palulus | noun (n.) Same as Palus. |
palus | noun (n.) One of several upright slender calcareous processes which surround the central part of the calicle of certain corals. |
pampas | noun (n. pl.) Vast plains in the central and southern part of the Argentine Republic in South America. The term is sometimes used in a wider sense for the plains extending from Bolivia to Southern Patagonia. |
pamperos | noun (n. pl.) A tribe of Indians inhabiting the pampas of South America. |
pamprodactylous | adjective (a.) Having all the toes turned forward, as the colies. |
pancreas | noun (n.) The sweetbread, a gland connected with the intestine of nearly all vertebrates. It is usually elongated and light-colored, and its secretion, called the pancreatic juice, is discharged, often together with the bile, into the upper part of the intestines, and is a powerful aid in digestion. See Illust. of Digestive apparatus. |
pandanus | noun (n.) A genus of endogenous plants. See Screw pine. |
pandarous | adjective (a.) Panderous. |
panderous | adjective (a.) Of or relating to a pander; characterizing a pander. |
panegyris | noun (n.) A festival; a public assembly. |
paneless | adjective (a.) Without panes. |
pangenesis | noun (n.) An hypothesis advanced by Darwin in explanation of heredity. |
pangless | adjective (a.) Without a pang; painless. |
panivorous | adjective (a.) Eating bread; subsisting on bread. |
pannus | noun (n.) A very vascular superficial opacity of the cornea, usually caused by granulation of the eyelids. |
pantheress | noun (n.) A female panther. |
pantophagous | adjective (a.) Eating all kinds of food. |
papaveraceous | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or resembling, a natural order of plants (Papaveraceae) of which the poppy, the celandine, and the bloodroot are well-known examples. |
papaverous | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the poppy; of the nature of the poppy. |
papess | noun (n.) A female pope; i. e., the fictitious pope Joan. |
papilionaceous | adjective (a.) Resembling the butterfly. |
adjective (a.) Having a winged corolla somewhat resembling a butterfly, as in the blossoms of the bean and pea. | |
adjective (a.) Belonging to that suborder of leguminous plants (Papilionaceae) which includes the bean, pea, vetch, clover, and locust. |
papiliones | noun (n. pl.) The division of Lepidoptera which includes the butterflies. |
papilionides | noun (n. pl.) The typical butterflies. |
papillomatous | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or consisting of, papillomata. |
papillous | adjective (a.) Papillary; papillose. |
pappous | adjective (a.) Pappose. |
pappus | noun (n.) The hairy or feathery appendage of the achenes of thistles, dandelions, and most other plants of the order Compositae; also, the scales, awns, or bristles which represent the calyx in other plants of the same order. |
papuars | noun (n. pl.) The native black race of Papua or New Guinea, and the adjacent islands. |
papulous | adjective (a.) Covered with, or characterized by, papulae; papulose. |
papyraceous | adjective (a.) Made of papyrus; of the consistency of paper; papery. |
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. |
paracentesis | noun (n.) The perforation of a cavity of the body with a trocar, aspirator, or other suitable instrument, for the evacuation of effused fluid, pus, or gas; tapping. |
parados | noun (n.) An intercepting mound, erected in any part of a fortification to protect the defenders from a rear or ricochet fire; a traverse. |
paradoxides | noun (n.) A genus of large trilobites characteristic of the primordial formations. |
paragenesis | noun (n.) The science which treats of minerals with special reference to their origin. |
noun (n.) The formation of minerals in contact, so as to affect one another's development. | |
noun (n.) The order in which minerals occurring together in rocks and veins have developed. |
paragnathous | adjective (a.) Having both mandibles of equal length, the tips meeting, as in certain birds. |
paragnathus | noun (n.) One of the two lobes which form the lower lip, or metastome, of Crustacea. |
noun (n.) One of the small, horny, toothlike jaws of certain annelids. |
paraleipsis | noun (n.) A pretended or apparent omission; a figure by which a speaker artfully pretends to pass by what he really mentions; as, for example, if an orator should say, "I do not speak of my adversary's scandalous venality and rapacity, his brutal conduct, his treachery and malice." |
paralepsis | noun (n.) See Paraleipsis. |
paralipsis | noun (n.) See Paraleipsis. |
parallelless | adjective (a.) Matchless. |
paralysis | noun (n.) Abolition of function, whether complete or partial; esp., the loss of the power of voluntary motion, with or without that of sensation, in any part of the body; palsy. See Hemiplegia, and Paraplegia. Also used figuratively. |
parametritis | noun (n.) Inflammation of the cellular tissue in the vicinity of the uterus. |
paramorphous | adjective (a.) Relating to paramorphism; exhibiting paramorphism. |
paranucleus | noun (n.) Some as Nucleolus. |
parapetalous | adjective (a.) Growing by the side of a petal, as a stamen. |
paraphimosis | noun (n.) A condition in which the prepuce, after being retracted behind the glans penis, is constricted there, and can not be brought forward into place again. |
paraphysis | noun (n.) A minute jointed filament growing among the archegonia and antheridia of mosses, or with the spore cases, etc., of other flowerless plants. |
parapophysis | noun (n.) The ventral transverse, or capitular, process of a vertebra. See Vertebra. |
parasynaxis | noun (n.) An unlawful meeting. |
parataxis | noun (n.) The mere ranging of propositions one after another, without indicating their connection or interdependence; -- opposed to syntax. |
parathesis | noun (n.) The placing of two or more nouns in the same case; apposition. |
noun (n.) A parenthetical notice, usually of matter to be afterward expanded. | |
noun (n.) The matter contained within brackets. | |
noun (n.) A commendatory prayer. |
parchedness | noun (n.) The state of being parched. |
pardonableness | noun (n.) The quality or state of being pardonable; as, the pardonableness of sin. |
paremptosis | noun (n.) Same as Parembole. |
parenchymatous | adjective (a.) Alt. of Parenchymous |
parenchymous | adjective (a.) Of, pertaining to, or connected with, the parenchyma of a tissue or an organ; as, parenchymatous degeneration. |
parenesis | noun (n.) Exhortation. |
parenthesis | noun (n.) A word, phrase, or sentence, by way of comment or explanation, inserted in, or attached to, a sentence which would be grammatically complete without it. It is usually inclosed within curved lines (see def. 2 below), or dashes. |
noun (n.) One of the curved lines () which inclose a parenthetic word or phrase. |
parentless | adjective (a.) Deprived of parents. |
parepididymis | noun (n.) A small body containing convoluted tubules, situated near the epididymis in man and some other animals, and supposed to be a remnant of the anterior part of the Wolffian body. |
paresis | noun (n.) Incomplete paralysis, affecting motion but not sensation. |