BIRDIE - Name Report For First Name BIRDIE:
First name BIRDIE's origin is English. BIRDIE
means "contemporary name meaning little bird: birdlike". You can find other first names
and English words that rhymes with BIRDIE
below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according
to the first letters, last letters and first&last
letters of birdie.(Brown
names are of the same origin (English) with BIRDIE
and Red names are first
names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming BIRDIE
English Words Rhyming BIRDIE
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES BİRDİE AS A WHOLE:| birdie | noun (n.) A pretty or dear little bird; -- a pet name. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH BİRDİE (According to last letters):Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (irdie) - English Words That Ends with irdie:Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (rdie) - English Words That Ends with rdie:| beardie | noun (n.) The bearded loach (Nemachilus barbatus) of Europe. |
| cowardie | noun (n.) Cowardice. |
| geordie | noun (n.) A name given by miners to George Stephenson's safety lamp. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (die) - English Words That Ends with die:| accidie | noun (n.) Sloth; torpor. |
| almadie | noun (n.) A bark canoe used by the Africans. | | | noun (n.) A boat used at Calicut, in India, about eighty feet long, and six or seven broad. |
| cadie | noun (n.) Alt. of Caddie |
| caddie | noun (n.) A Scotch errand boy, porter, or messenger. | | | noun (n.) A cadet. | | | noun (n.) A lad; young fellow. | | | noun (n.) One who does errands or other odd jobs. | | | noun (n.) An attendant who carries a golf player's clubs, tees his ball, etc. |
| cowdie | noun (n.) See Kauri. |
| dandie | noun (n.) One of a breed of small terriers; -- called also Dandie Dinmont. | | | noun (n.) In Scott's "Guy Mannering", a Border farmer of eccentric but fine character, who owns two terriers claimed to be the progenitors of the Dandie Dinmont terriers. | | | noun (n.) One of a breed of terriers with short legs, long body, and rough coat, originating in the country about the English and Scotch border. |
| die | noun (n.) A small cube, marked on its faces with spots from one to six, and used in playing games by being shaken in a box and thrown from it. See Dice. | | | noun (n.) Any small cubical or square body. | | | noun (n.) That which is, or might be, determined, by a throw of the die; hazard; chance. | | | noun (n.) That part of a pedestal included between base and cornice; the dado. | | | noun (n.) A metal or plate (often one of a pair) so cut or shaped as to give a certain desired form to, or impress any desired device on, an object or surface, by pressure or by a blow; used in forging metals, coining, striking up sheet metal, etc. | | | noun (n.) A perforated block, commonly of hardened steel used in connection with a punch, for punching holes, as through plates, or blanks from plates, or for forming cups or capsules, as from sheet metal, by drawing. | | | noun (n.) A hollow internally threaded screw-cutting tool, made in one piece or composed of several parts, for forming screw threads on bolts, etc.; one of the separate parts which make up such a tool. | | | verb (v. i.) To pass from an animate to a lifeless state; to cease to live; to suffer a total and irreparable loss of action of the vital functions; to become dead; to expire; to perish; -- said of animals and vegetables; often with of, by, with, from, and rarely for, before the cause or occasion of death; as, to die of disease or hardships; to die by fire or the sword; to die with horror at the thought. | | | verb (v. i.) To suffer death; to lose life. | | | verb (v. i.) To perish in any manner; to cease; to become lost or extinct; to be extinguished. | | | verb (v. i.) To sink; to faint; to pine; to languish, with weakness, discouragement, love, etc. | | | verb (v. i.) To become indifferent; to cease to be subject; as, to die to pleasure or to sin. | | | verb (v. i.) To recede and grow fainter; to become imperceptible; to vanish; -- often with out or away. | | | verb (v. i.) To disappear gradually in another surface, as where moldings are lost in a sloped or curved face. | | | verb (v. i.) To become vapid, flat, or spiritless, as liquor. | | | (pl. ) of Dice |
| goldie | noun (n.) The European goldfinch. | | | noun (n.) The yellow-hammer. |
| gowdie | noun (n.) See Dragont. |
| haddie | noun (n.) The haddock. |
| laddie | noun (n.) A lad; a male sweetheart. |
| medjidie | noun (n.) Alt. of Medjidieh |
| organdie | noun (n.) Alt. of Organdy |
| waddie | noun (n. & v.) See Waddy. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH BİRDİE (According to first letters):Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (birdi) - Words That Begins with birdi:| birdikin | noun (n.) A young bird. |
| birding | noun (n.) Birdcatching or fowling. |
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (bird) - Words That Begins with bird:| bird | noun (n.) Orig., a chicken; the young of a fowl; a young eaglet; a nestling; and hence, a feathered flying animal (see 2). | | | noun (n.) A warm-blooded, feathered vertebrate provided with wings. See Aves. | | | noun (n.) Specifically, among sportsmen, a game bird. | | | noun (n.) Fig.: A girl; a maiden. | | | verb (v. i.) To catch or shoot birds. | | | verb (v. i.) Hence: To seek for game or plunder; to thieve. |
| birdbolt | noun (n.) A short blunt arrow for killing birds without piercing them. | | | noun (n.) Anything which smites without penetrating. |
| bird cage | noun (n.) Alt. of Birdcage |
| birdcage | noun (n.) A cage for confining birds. |
| birdcall | noun (n.) A sound made in imitation of the note or cry of a bird for the purpose of decoying the bird or its mate. | | | noun (n.) An instrument of any kind, as a whistle, used in making the sound of a birdcall. |
| birdcatcher | noun (n.) One whose employment it is to catch birds; a fowler. |
| birdcatching | noun (n.) The art, act, or occupation or catching birds or wild fowls. |
| birder | noun (n.) A birdcatcher. |
| birdlet | noun (n.) A little bird; a nestling. |
| birdlike | adjective (a.) Resembling a bird. |
| birdlime | noun (n.) An extremely adhesive viscid substance, usually made of the middle bark of the holly, by boiling, fermenting, and cleansing it. When a twig is smeared with this substance it will hold small birds which may light upon it. Hence: Anything which insnares. | | | verb (v. t.) To smear with birdlime; to catch with birdlime; to insnare. |
| birdling | noun (n.) A little bird; a nestling. |
| birdman | noun (n.) A fowler or birdcatcher. | | | noun (n.) An aviator; airman. |
| birdseed | noun (n.) Canary seed, hemp, millet or other small seeds used for feeding caged birds. |
| bird's nest | noun (n.) Alt. of Bird's-nest |
| birdwoman | noun (n.) An airwoman; an aviatress. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (bir) - Words That Begins with bir:| biradiate | adjective (a.) Alt. of Biradiated |
| biradiated | adjective (a.) Having two rays; as, a biradiate fin. |
| biramous | adjective (a.) Having, or consisting of, two branches. |
| birch | noun (n.) A tree of several species, constituting the genus Betula; as, the white or common birch (B. alba) (also called silver birch and lady birch); the dwarf birch (B. glandulosa); the paper or canoe birch (B. papyracea); the yellow birch (B. lutea); the black or cherry birch (B. lenta). | | | noun (n.) The wood or timber of the birch. | | | noun (n.) A birch twig or birch twigs, used for flogging. | | | noun (n.) A birch-bark canoe. | | | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the birch; birchen. | | | verb (v. t.) To whip with a birch rod or twig; to flog. |
| birching | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Birch |
| birchen | adjective (a.) Of or relating to birch. |
| birectangular | adjective (a.) Containing or having two right angles; as, a birectangular spherical triangle. |
| bireme | noun (n.) An ancient galley or vessel with two banks or tiers of oars. |
| biretta | noun (n.) Same as Berretta. |
| birgander | noun (n.) See Bergander. |
| birk | noun (n.) A birch tree. | | | noun (n.) A small European minnow (Leuciscus phoxinus). |
| birken | adjective (a.) Birchen; as, birken groves. | | | verb (v. t.) To whip with a birch or rod. |
| birkie | noun (n.) A lively or mettlesome fellow. |
| birlaw | noun (n.) A law made by husbandmen respecting rural affairs; a rustic or local law or by-law. |
| birostrate | adjective (a.) Alt. of Birostrated |
| birostrated | adjective (a.) Having a double beak, or two processes resembling beaks. |
| birring | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Birr |
| birr | noun (n.) A whirring sound, as of a spinning wheel. | | | noun (n.) A rush or impetus; force. | | | verb (v. i.) To make, or move with, a whirring noise, as of wheels in motion. |
| 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. |
| birse | noun (n.) A bristle or bristles. |
| birt | noun (n.) A fish of the turbot kind; the brill. |
| birth | noun (n.) The act or fact of coming into life, or of being born; -- generally applied to human beings; as, the birth of a son. | | | noun (n.) Lineage; extraction; descent; sometimes, high birth; noble extraction. | | | noun (n.) The condition to which a person is born; natural state or position; inherited disposition or tendency. | | | noun (n.) The act of bringing forth; as, she had two children at a birth. | | | noun (n.) That which is born; that which is produced, whether animal or vegetable. | | | noun (n.) Origin; beginning; as, the birth of an empire. | | | noun (n.) See Berth. |
| birthday | noun (n.) The day in which any person is born; day of origin or commencement. | | | noun (n.) The day of the month in which a person was born, in whatever succeeding year it may recur; the anniversary of one's birth. | | | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the day of birth, or its anniversary; as, birthday gifts or festivities. |
| birthdom | noun (n.) The land of one's birth; one's inheritance. |
| birthing | noun (n.) Anything added to raise the sides of a ship. |
| birthless | adjective (a.) Of mean extraction. |
| birthmark | noun (n.) Some peculiar mark or blemish on the body at birth. |
| birthnight | noun (n.) The night in which a person is born; the anniversary of that night in succeeding years. |
| birthplace | noun (n.) The town, city, or country, where a person is born; place of origin or birth, in its more general sense. |
| birthright | noun (n.) Any right, privilege, or possession to which a person is entitled by birth, such as an estate descendible by law to an heir, or civil liberty under a free constitution; esp. the rights or inheritance of the first born. |
| birthroot | noun (n.) An herbaceous plant (Trillium erectum), and its astringent rootstock, which is said to have medicinal properties. |
| birthwort | noun (n.) A genus of herbs and shrubs (Aristolochia), reputed to have medicinal properties. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH BİRDİE:English Words which starts with 'bi' and ends with 'ie':
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