EMILY - Name Report For First Name EMILY:
First name EMILY's origin is German. EMILY
means "industrious, eager". You can find other first names
and English words that rhymes with EMILY
below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according
to the first letters, last letters and first&last
letters of emily.(Brown
names are of the same origin (German) with EMILY
and Red names are first
names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming EMILY
English Words Rhyming EMILY
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES EMİLY AS A WHOLE: ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH EMİLY (According to last letters):Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (mily) - English Words That Ends with mily:| homily | noun (n.) A discourse or sermon read or pronounced to an audience; a serious discourse. | | | noun (n.) A serious or tedious exhortation in private on some moral point, or on the conduct of life. |
| subfamily | noun (n.) One of the subdivisions, of more importance than genus, into which certain families are divided. |
| superfamily | noun (n.) A group intermediate between a family and a suborder. |
| vermily | noun (n.) Vermeil. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (ily) - English Words That Ends with ily:| bodily | adjective (a.) Having a body or material form; physical; corporeal; consisting of matter. | | | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the body, in distinction from the mind. | | | adjective (a.) Real; actual; put in execution. | | | adverb (adv.) Corporeally; in bodily form; united with a body or matter; in the body. | | | adverb (adv.) In respect to, or so as to affect, the entire body or mass; entirely; all at once; completely; as, to carry away bodily. "Leapt bodily below." |
| causticily | noun (n.) The quality of being caustic; corrosiveness; as, the causticity of potash. | | | noun (n.) Severity of language; sarcasm; as, the causticity of a reply or remark. |
| daily | noun (n.) A publication which appears regularly every day; as, the morning dailies. | | | adjective (a.) Happening, or belonging to, each successive day; diurnal; as, daily labor; a daily bulletin. | | | adverb (adv.) Every day; day by day; as, a thing happens daily. |
| doily | noun (n.) A kind of woolen stuff. | | | noun (n.) A small napkin, used at table with the fruit, etc.; -- commonly colored and fringed. |
| flaily | adjective (a.) Acting like a flail. |
| folily | adjective (a.) Foolishly. |
| haily | adjective (a.) Of hail. |
| imaginarily | adjective (a.) In a imaginary manner; in imagination. |
| lily | noun (n.) A plant and flower of the genus Lilium, endogenous bulbous plants, having a regular perianth of six colored pieces, six stamens, and a superior three-celled ovary. | | | noun (n.) A name given to handsome flowering plants of several genera, having some resemblance in color or form to a true lily, as Pancratium, Crinum, Amaryllis, Nerine, etc. | | | noun (n.) That end of a compass needle which should point to the north; -- so called as often ornamented with the figure of a lily or fleur-de-lis. | | | noun (n.) A royal spade; -- usually in pl. See Royal spade, below. |
| loobily | adjective (a.) Loobylike; awkward. | | | adverb (adv.) Awkwardly. |
| mustily | adjective (a.) In a musty state. |
| nemophily | noun (n.) Fondness for forest scenery; love of the woods. |
| officialily | noun (n.) See Officialty. |
| quaily | noun (n.) The upland plover. | | | noun (n.) The upland plover. |
| pily | adjective (a.) Like pile or wool. |
| rily | adjective (a.) Roily. |
| roily | adjective (a.) Turbid; as, roily water. |
| saily | adjective (a.) Like a sail. |
| soily | adjective (a.) Dirty; soiled. |
| tempestivily | noun (n.) The quality, or state, of being tempestive; seasonableness. |
| zoophily | noun (n.) Love of animals. |
| weevily | adjective (a.) Having weevils; weeviled. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH EMİLY (According to first letters):Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (emil) - Words That Begins with emil:Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (emi) - Words That Begins with emi:| emicant | adjective (a.) Beaming forth; flashing. |
| emication | noun (n.) A flying off in small particles, as heated iron or fermenting liquors; a sparkling; scintillation. |
| emiction | noun (n.) The voiding of urine. | | | noun (n.) What is voided by the urinary passages; urine. |
| emictory | noun (a. & n.) Diuretic. |
| emigrant | noun (n.) One who emigrates, or quits one country or region to settle in another. | | | verb (v. i.) Removing from one country to another; emigrating; as, an emigrant company or nation. | | | verb (v. i.) Pertaining to an emigrant; used for emigrants; as, an emigrant ship or hospital. |
| emigrating | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Emigrate |
| emigrate | adjective (a.) Migratory; roving. | | | verb (v. i.) To remove from one country or State to another, for the purpose of residence; to migrate from home. |
| emigration | noun (n.) The act of emigrating; removal from one country or state to another, for the purpose of residence, as from Europe to America, or, in America, from the Atlantic States to the Western. | | | noun (n.) A body emigrants; emigrants collectively; as, the German emigration. |
| emigrational | adjective (a.) Relating to emigration. |
| emigrationist | noun (n.) An advocate or promoter of emigration. |
| emigrator | noun (n.) One who emigrates; am emigrant. |
| emigre | noun (n.) One of the natives of France who were opposed to the first Revolution, and who left their country in consequence. |
| eminence | noun (n.) That which is eminent or lofty; a high ground or place; a height. | | | noun (n.) An elevated condition among men; a place or station above men in general, either in rank, office, or celebrity; social or moral loftiness; high rank; distinction; preferment. | | | noun (n.) A title of honor, especially applied to a cardinal in the Roman Catholic Church. |
| eminency | noun (n.) State of being eminent; eminence. |
| eminent | adjective (a.) High; lofty; towering; prominent. | | | adjective (a.) Being, metaphorically, above others, whether by birth, high station, merit, or virtue; high in public estimation; distinguished; conspicuous; as, an eminent station; an eminent historian, statements, statesman, or saint. |
| emir | noun (n.) Alt. of Emeer |
| emirship | noun (n.) Alt. of Emeership |
| emissary | noun (n.) An agent employed to advance, in a covert manner, the interests of his employers; one sent out by any power that is at war with another, to create dissatisfaction among the people of the latter. | | | adjective (a.) Exploring; spying. | | | adjective (a.) Applied to the veins which pass out of the cranium through apertures in its walls. |
| emissaryship | noun (n.) The office of an emissary. |
| emission | noun (n.) The act of sending or throwing out; the act of sending forth or putting into circulation; issue; as, the emission of light from the sun; the emission of heat from a fire; the emission of bank notes. | | | noun (n.) That which is sent out, issued, or put in circulation at one time; issue; as, the emission was mostly blood. |
| emissitious | adjective (a.) Looking, or narrowly examining; prying. |
| emissive | adjective (a.) Sending out; emitting; as, emissive powers. |
| emissivity | noun (n.) Tendency to emission; comparative facility of emission, or rate at which emission takes place, as of heat from the surface of a heated body. | | | noun (n.) Tendency to emission; comparative facility of emission, or rate at which emission takes place; | | | noun (n.) the rate of emission of heat from a bounding surface per degree of temperature difference between the surface and surrounding substances (called by Fourier external conductivity). |
| emissory | adjective (a.) Same as Emissary, a., 2. |
| emitting | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Emit |
| emittent | adjective (a.) Sending forth; emissive. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH EMİLY:English Words which starts with 'em' and ends with 'ly':| emboly | noun (n.) Embolic invagination. See under Invagination. |
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