Name Report For First Name FLORIA:

FLORIA

First name FLORIA's origin is French. FLORIA means "flower". You can find other first names and English words that rhymes with FLORIA below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according to the first letters, last letters and first&last letters of floria.(Brown names are of the same origin (French) with FLORIA and Red names are first names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)

Rhymes with FLORIA - Names & Words

First Names Rhyming FLORIA

FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES FLORİA AS A WHOLE:

floriana

NAMES RHYMING WITH FLORİA (According to last letters):

Rhyming Names According to Last 5 Letters (loria) - Names That Ends with loria:

cloria loria

Rhyming Names According to Last 4 Letters (oria) - Names That Ends with oria:

viktoria oria victoria horia devoria gregoria moria vittoria doria honoria

Rhyming Names According to Last 3 Letters (ria) - Names That Ends with ria:

kamaria berengaria cambria ingria demetria egeria elefteria hesperia tiberia kaaria zaharia adairia alegria alexandria andria annamaria aphria aria audria azaria azzaria bria caffaria calandria ceria daria deandria desideria erendiria fearcharia garia honbria kambria kendria kiandria laria mairia oliveria ria rosamaria rosemaria sabria xavieria xeveria yanamaria zimria zacharia chandria niria elepheteria cytheria maria zuria auria neria naiaria berangaria

Rhyming Names According to Last 2 Letters (ia) - Names That Ends with ia:

afia aminia ashia efia fowsia safia tawia beornia bernia odelia alaia badi'a dummonia amaia donia erensia kamia melodia saskia nubia tabia bethia abelia adalia aloysia agalaia agalia aglaia alesia ambrosia anthia

NAMES RHYMING WITH FLORİA (According to first letters):

Rhyming Names According to First 5 Letters (flori) - Names That Begins with flori:

flori florica florida florin florina florinda florinia florinio florismart florita

Rhyming Names According to First 4 Letters (flor) - Names That Begins with flor:

flor flordelis floree florence florencia florenta florentin florentina florentino floressa florete floretta florka florrie florus

Rhyming Names According to First 3 Letters (flo) - Names That Begins with flo:

flo floarea floinn flollo floyd

Rhyming Names According to First 2 Letters (fl) - Names That Begins with fl:

flainn flair flanagan flann flanna flannagain flannagan flannery flavia flavio flaviu flavius fleischaker fleming fleta fletcher fleur fleurette flin flinn flint flip flyn flynn flynt flyta

NAMES BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH FLORİA:

First Names which starts with 'fl' and ends with 'ia':

First Names which starts with 'f' and ends with 'a':

fabia fabiana fadheela fadwa fala falerina fana fanetta fannia fanta fantina faoiltiama faqueza fara fareeda fareeha farhana fariha fatima fatina fatuma fauna faunia fausta faustina fawna fawnia fawziya fayanna fayela fayina fayola fayza fazia fearchara fearnlea fedora fela felberta felda felecia felicia felicita felisa felisberta fenella feodora ferda fermina fernanda fia fiacra fianna fida fidelma fifna filberta filia filicia filipa filipina filomena filomenia fina fineena finella fingula finna finola fiona fionna fionnghuala fionnuala fiorenza firtha fola foma fonda forba forbia forsa fortuna francena francesca francia francina francisca franciska franta frantiska franziska freca freda fredda frederica frederika fredrika freira freja frenchesca

English Words Rhyming FLORIA

ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES FLORİA AS A WHOLE:

floriagenoun (n.) Bloom; blossom.

floriatedadjective (a.) Having floral ornaments; as, floriated capitals of Gothic pillars.

floriationnoun (n.) Ornamentation by means of flower forms, whether closely imitated or conventionalized.
 noun (n.) Any floral ornament or decoration.

ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH FLORİA (According to last letters):


Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (loria) - English Words That Ends with loria:


glorianoun (n.) A doxology (beginning Gloria Patri, Glory be to the Father), sung or said at the end of the Psalms in the service of the Roman Catholic and other churches.
 noun (n.) A portion of the Mass (Gloria in Excelsis Deo, Glory be to God on high), and also of the communion service in some churches. In the Episcopal Church the version in English is used.
 noun (n.) The musical setting of a gloria.

pelorianoun (n.) Abnormal regularity; the state of certain flowers, which, being naturally irregular, have become regular through a symmetrical repetition of the special irregularity.


Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (oria) - English Words That Ends with oria:


aporianoun (n.) A figure in which the speaker professes to be at a loss what course to pursue, where to begin to end, what to say, etc.

anisocorianoun (n.) Inequality of the pupils of the eye.

dysphorianoun (n.) Impatience under affliction; morbid restlessness; dissatisfaction; the fidgets.

fossorianoun (n. pl.) See Fossores.

infusorianoun (n. pl.) One of the classes of Protozoa, including a large number of species, all of minute size.

memorianoun (n.) Memory.

morianoun (n.) Idiocy; imbecility; fatuity; foolishness.

norianoun (n.) A large water wheel, turned by the action of a stream against its floats, and carrying at its circumference buckets, by which water is raised and discharged into a trough; used in Arabia, China, and elsewhere for irrigating land; a Persian wheel.

oscillatorianoun (n. pl.) Same as Oscillaria.

phantasmagorianoun (n.) An optical effect produced by a magic lantern. The figures are painted in transparent colors, and all the rest of the glass is opaque black. The screen is between the spectators and the instrument, and the figures are often made to appear as in motion, or to merge into one another.
 noun (n.) The apparatus by which such an effect is produced.
 noun (n.) Fig.: A medley of figures; illusive images.

rotatorianoun (n. pl.) Same as Rotifera.

saltatorianoun (n. pl.) A division of Orthoptera including grasshoppers, locusts, and crickets.

scorianoun (n.) The recrement of metals in fusion, or the slag rejected after the reduction of metallic ores; dross.
 noun (n.) Cellular slaggy lava; volcanic cinders.

suctorianoun (n. pl.) An order of Infusoria having the body armed with somewhat stiff, tubular processes which they use as suckers in obtaining their food. They are usually stalked.
 noun (n. pl.) Same as Rhizocephala.

thorianoun (n.) A rare white earthy substance, consisting of the oxide of thorium; -- formerly called also thorina.

victorianoun (n.) A genus of aquatic plants named in honor of Queen Victoria. The Victoria regia is a native of Guiana and Brazil. Its large, spreading leaves are often over five feet in diameter, and have a rim from three to five inches high; its immense rose-white flowers sometimes attain a diameter of nearly two feet.
 noun (n.) A kind of low four-wheeled pleasure carriage, with a calash top, designed for two persons and the driver who occupies a high seat in front.
 noun (n.) An asteroid discovered by Hind in 1850; -- called also Clio.
 noun (n.) One of an American breed of medium-sized white hogs with a slightly dished face and very erect ears.


Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (ria) - English Words That Ends with ria:


actinarianoun (n. pl.) A large division of Anthozoa, including those which have simple tentacles and do not form stony corals. Sometimes, in a wider sense, applied to all the Anthozoa, expert the Alcyonaria, whether forming corals or not.

adularianoun (n.) A transparent or translucent variety of common feldspar, or orthoclase, which often shows pearly opalescent reflections; -- called by lapidaries moonstone.

adversarianoun (n. pl.) A miscellaneous collection of notes, remarks, or selections; a commonplace book; also, commentaries or notes.

albuminurianoun (n.) A morbid condition in which albumin is present in the urine.

alcyonarianoun (n. pl.) One of the orders of Anthozoa. It includes the Alcyonacea, Pennatulacea, and Gorgonacea.

alfilarianoun (n.) The pin grass (Erodium cicutarium), a weed in California.

appendicularianoun (n.) A genus of small free-swimming Tunicata, shaped somewhat like a tadpole, and remarkable for resemblances to the larvae of other Tunicata. It is the type of the order Copelata or Larvalia. See Illustration in Appendix.

apterianoun (n. pl.) Naked spaces between the feathered areas of birds. See Pteryliae.

araucarianoun (n.) A genus of tall conifers of the pine family. The species are confined mostly to South America and Australia. The wood cells differ from those of other in having the dots in their lateral surfaces in two or three rows, and the dots of contiguous rows alternating. The seeds are edible.

arianoun (n.) An air or song; a melody; a tune.

auricularianoun (n. pl.) A kind of holothurian larva, with soft, blunt appendages. See Illustration in Appendix.

avicularianoun (n. pl.) See prehensile processes on the cells of some Bryozoa, often having the shape of a bird's bill.

acetonurianoun (n.) Excess of acetone in the urine, as in starvation or diabetes.

alfilerianoun (n.) Alt. of Alfilerilla

azoturianoun (n.) Excess of urea or other nitrogenous substances in the urine.

bacterianoun (n.p.) See Bacterium.
  (pl. ) of Bacterium

balistrarianoun (n.) A narrow opening, often cruciform, through which arrows might be discharged.

barianoun (n.) Baryta.

bipinnarianoun (n.) The larva of certain starfishes as developed in the free-swimming stage.

brachiolarianoun (n. pl.) A peculiar early larval stage of certain starfishes, having a bilateral structure, and swimming by means of bands of vibrating cilia.

calceolarianoun (n.) A genus of showy herbaceous or shrubby plants, brought from South America; slipperwort. It has a yellow or purple flower, often spotted or striped, the shape of which suggests its name.

calvarianoun (n.) The bones of the cranium; more especially, the bones of the domelike upper portion.

cambrianoun (n.) The ancient Latin name of Wales. It is used by modern poets.

carinarianoun (n.) A genus of oceanic heteropod Mollusca, having a thin, glassy, bonnet-shaped shell, which covers only the nucleus and gills.

cercarianoun (n.) The larval form of a trematode worm having the shape of a tadpole, with its body terminated by a tail-like appendage.

chylurianoun (n.) A morbid condition in which the urine contains chyle or fatty matter, giving it a milky appearance.

cinerarianoun (n.) A Linnaean genus of free-flowering composite plants, mostly from South Africa. Several species are cultivated for ornament.

cnidarianoun (n. pl.) A comprehensive group equivalent to the true Coelenterata, i. e., exclusive of the sponges. They are so named from presence of stinging cells (cnidae) in the tissues. See Coelenterata.

convallarianoun (n.) The lily of the valley.

crotalarianoun (n.) A genus of leguminous plants; rattlebox.

curianoun (n.) One of the thirty parts into which the Roman people were divided by Romulus.
 noun (n.) The place of assembly of one of these divisions.
 noun (n.) The place where the meetings of the senate were held; the senate house.
 noun (n.) The court of a sovereign or of a feudal lord; also; his residence or his household.
 noun (n.) Any court of justice.
 noun (n.) The Roman See in its temporal aspects, including all the machinery of administration; -- called also curia Romana.

caballerianoun (n.) An ancient Spanish land tenure similar to the English knight's fee; hence, in Spain and countries settled by the Spanish, a land measure of varying size. In Cuba it is about 33 acres; in Porto Rico, about 194 acres; in the Southwestern United States, about 108 acres.

cafeterianoun (n.) A restaurant or cafe at which the patrons serve themselves with food kept at a counter, taking the food to small tables to eat.

cerianoun (n.) Cerium oxide, CeO2, a white infusible substance constituting about one per cent of the material of the common incandescent mantle.

datarianoun (n.) Formerly, a part of the Roman chancery; now, a separate office from which are sent graces or favors, cognizable in foro externo, such as appointments to benefices. The name is derived from the word datum, given or dated (with the indications of the time and place of granting the gift or favor).

decandrianoun (n. pl.) A Linnaean class of plants characterized by having ten stamens.

desmobacterianoun (n. pl.) See Microbacteria.

desmomyarianoun (n. pl.) The division of Tunicata which includes the Salpae. See Salpa.

diandrianoun (n. pl.) A Linnaean class of plants having two stamens.

dimyarianoun (n. pl.) An order of lamellibranchiate mollusks having an anterior and posterior adductor muscle, as the common clam. See Bivalve.

dinosaurianoun (n. pl.) An order of extinct mesozoic reptiles, mostly of large size (whence the name). Notwithstanding their size, they present birdlike characters in the skeleton, esp. in the pelvis and hind limbs. Some walked on their three-toed hind feet, thus producing the large "bird tracks," so-called, of mesozoic sandstones; others were five-toed and quadrupedal. See Illust. of Compsognathus, also Illustration of Dinosaur in Appendix.

diphtherianoun (n.) A very dangerous contagious disease in which the air passages, and especially the throat, become coated with a false membrane, produced by the solidification of an inflammatory exudation. Cf. Group.

dodecandrianoun (n. pl.) A Linnaean class of plants including all that have any number of stamens between twelve and nineteen.

dysurianoun (n.) Alt. of Dysury

enaliosaurianoun (n. pl.) An extinct group of marine reptiles, embracing both the Ichthyosauria and the Plesiosauria, now regarded as distinct orders.

enheahedrianoun (n.) Alt. of Enheahedron

enneandrianoun (n.) A Linnaean class of plants having nine stamens.

ferianoun (n.) A week day, esp. a day which is neither a festival nor a fast.

filarianoun (n.) A genus of slender, nematode worms of many species, parasitic in various animals. See Guinea worm.

fimbrianoun (n.) A fringe, or fringed border.
 noun (n.) A band of white matter bordering the hippocampus in the brain.

ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH FLORİA (According to first letters):


Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (flori) - Words That Begins with flori:


floricomousadjective (a.) Having the head adorned with flowers.

floriculturaladjective (a.) Pertaining to the cultivation of flowering plants.

floriculturenoun (n.) The cultivation of flowering plants.

floriculturistnoun (n.) One skilled in the cultivation of flowers; a florist.

floridadjective (a.) Covered with flowers; abounding in flowers; flowery.
 adjective (a.) Bright in color; flushed with red; of a lively reddish color; as, a florid countenance.
 adjective (a.) Embellished with flowers of rhetoric; enriched to excess with figures; excessively ornate; as, a florid style; florid eloquence.
 adjective (a.) Flowery; ornamental; running in rapid melodic figures, divisions, or passages, as in variations; full of fioriture or little ornamentations.

florideaenoun (n. pl.) A subclass of algae including all the red or purplish seaweeds; the Rhodospermeae of many authors; -- so called from the rosy or florid color of most of the species.

floriditynoun (n.) The quality of being florid; floridness.

floridnessnoun (n.) The quality of being florid.

floriferousadjective (a.) Producing flowers.

florificationnoun (n.) The act, process, or time of flowering; florescence.

floriformadjective (a.) Having the form of a flower; flower-shaped.

florikennoun (n.) An Indian bustard (Otis aurita). The Bengal floriken is Sypheotides Bengalensis.

florilegenoun (n.) The act of gathering flowers.

florimernoun (n.) See Floramour.

florinnoun (n.) A silver coin of Florence, first struck in the twelfth century, and noted for its beauty. The name is given to different coins in different countries. The florin of England, first minted in 1849, is worth two shillings, or about 48 cents; the florin of the Netherlands, about 40 cents; of Austria, about 36 cents.

floristnoun (n.) A cultivator of, or dealer in, flowers.
 noun (n.) One who writes a flora, or an account of plants.


Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (flor) - Words That Begins with flor:


floranoun (n.) The goddess of flowers and spring.
 noun (n.) The complete system of vegetable species growing without cultivation in a given locality, region, or period; a list or description of, or treatise on, such plants.

floraladjective (a.) Pertaining to Flora, or to flowers; made of flowers; as, floral games, wreaths.
 adjective (a.) Containing, or belonging to, a flower; as, a floral bud; a floral leaf; floral characters.

floramournoun (n.) The plant love-lies-bleeding.

florannoun (n.) Tin ore scarcely perceptible in the stone; tin ore stamped very fine.

florealnoun (n.) The eight month of the French republican calendar. It began April 20, and ended May 19. See Vendemiare.

florennoun (n.) A cerain gold coin; a Florence.

florencenoun (n.) An ancient gold coin of the time of Edward III., of six shillings sterling value.
 noun (n.) A kind of cloth.

florentinenoun (n.) A native or inhabitant of Florence, a city in Italy.
 noun (n.) A kind of silk.
 noun (n.) A kind of pudding or tart; a kind of meat pie.
 adjective (a.) Belonging or relating to Florence, in Italy.

florescencenoun (n.) A bursting into flower; a blossoming.

florescentadjective (a.) Expanding into flowers; blossoming.

floretnoun (n.) A little flower; one of the numerous little flowers which compose the head or anthodium in such flowers as the daisy, thistle, and dandelion.
 noun (n.) A foil; a blunt sword used in fencing.

floroonnoun (n.) A border worked with flowers.

florulentadjective (a.) Flowery; blossoming.


Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (flo) - Words That Begins with flo:


flonoun (n.) An arrow.

floatingnoun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Float
 noun (n.) Floating threads. See Floating threads, above.
 noun (n.) The second coat of three-coat plastering.
 noun (n.) The process of rendering oysters and scallops plump by placing them in fresh or brackish water; -- called also fattening, plumping, and laying out.
 adjective (a.) Buoyed upon or in a fluid; a, the floating timbers of a wreck; floating motes in the air.
 adjective (a.) Free or lose from the usual attachment; as, the floating ribs in man and some other animals.
 adjective (a.) Not funded; not fixed, invested, or determined; as, floating capital; a floating debt.

floatnoun (n.) To rest on the surface of any fluid; to swim; to be buoyed up.
 noun (n.) To move quietly or gently on the water, as a raft; to drift along; to move or glide without effort or impulse on the surface of a fluid, or through the air.
 verb (v. i.) Anything which floats or rests on the surface of a fluid, as to sustain weight, or to indicate the height of the surface, or mark the place of, something.
 verb (v. i.) A mass of timber or boards fastened together, and conveyed down a stream by the current; a raft.
 verb (v. i.) The hollow, metallic ball of a self-acting faucet, which floats upon the water in a cistern or boiler.
 verb (v. i.) The cork or quill used in angling, to support the bait line, and indicate the bite of a fish.
 verb (v. i.) Anything used to buoy up whatever is liable to sink; an inflated bag or pillow used by persons learning to swim; a life preserver.
 verb (v. i.) A float board. See Float board (below).
 verb (v. i.) A contrivance for affording a copious stream of water to the heated surface of an object of large bulk, as an anvil or die.
 verb (v. i.) The act of flowing; flux; flow.
 verb (v. i.) A quantity of earth, eighteen feet square and one foot deep.
 verb (v. i.) The trowel or tool with which the floated coat of plastering is leveled and smoothed.
 verb (v. i.) A polishing block used in marble working; a runner.
 verb (v. i.) A single-cut file for smoothing; a tool used by shoemakers for rasping off pegs inside a shoe.
 verb (v. i.) A coal cart.
 verb (v. i.) The sea; a wave. See Flote, n.
 verb (v. t.) To cause to float; to cause to rest or move on the surface of a fluid; as, the tide floated the ship into the harbor.
 verb (v. t.) To flood; to overflow; to cover with water.
 verb (v. t.) To pass over and level the surface of with a float while the plastering is kept wet.
 verb (v. t.) To support and sustain the credit of, as a commercial scheme or a joint-stock company, so as to enable it to go into, or continue in, operation.

floatableadjective (a.) That may be floated.

floatagenoun (n.) Same as Flotage.

floatationnoun (n.) See Flotation.

floaternoun (n.) One who floats or swims.
 noun (n.) A float for indicating the height of a liquid surface.
  () A voter who shifts from party to party, esp. one whose vote is purchasable.
  () A person, as a delegate to a convention or a member of a legislature, who represents an irregular constituency, as one formed by a union of the voters of two counties neither of which has a number sufficient to be allowed a (or an extra) representative of its own.
  () A person who votes illegally in various polling places or election districts, either under false registration made by himself or under the name of some properly registered person who has not already voted.

floatyadjective (a.) Swimming on the surface; buoyant; light.

flobertnoun (n.) A small cartridge designed for target shooting; -- sometimes called ball cap.

floccillationnoun (n.) A delirious picking of bedclothes by a sick person, as if to pick off flocks of wool; carphology; -- an alarming symptom in acute diseases.

floccosenoun (n.) Spotted with small tufts like wool.
 noun (n.) Having tufts of soft hairs, which are often deciduous.

floccularadjective (a.) Of or pertaining to the flocculus.

flocculatingnoun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Flocculate

flocculateadjective (a.) Furnished with tufts of curly hairs, as some insects.
 verb (v. i.) To aggregate into small lumps.
 verb (v. t.) To convert into floccules or flocculent aggregates; to make granular or crumbly; as, the flocculating of a soil improves its mechanical condition.

flocculationnoun (n.) The process by which small particles of fine soils and sediments aggregate into larger lumps.

flocculencenoun (n.) The state of being flocculent.

flocculentadjective (a.) Clothed with small flocks or flakes; woolly.
 adjective (a.) Applied to the down of newly hatched or unfledged birds.
 adjective (a.) Having a structure like shredded wool, as some precipitates.

flocculusnoun (n.) A small lobe in the under surface of the cerebellum, near the middle peduncle; the subpeduncular lobe.

floccusnoun (n.) The tuft of hair terminating the tail of mammals.
 noun (n.) A tuft of feathers on the head of young birds.
 noun (n.) A woolly filament sometimes occuring with the sporules of certain fungi.

flocknoun (n.) A company or collection of living creatures; -- especially applied to sheep and birds, rarely to persons or (except in the plural) to cattle and other large animals; as, a flock of ravenous fowl.
 noun (n.) A Christian church or congregation; considered in their relation to the pastor, or minister in charge.
 noun (n.) A lock of wool or hair.
 noun (n.) Woolen or cotton refuse (sing. / pl.), old rags, etc., reduced to a degree of fineness by machinery, and used for stuffing unpholstered furniture.
 verb (v. i.) To gather in companies or crowds.
 verb (v. t.) To flock to; to crowd.
 verb (v. t.) To coat with flock, as wall paper; to roughen the surface of (as glass) so as to give an appearance of being covered with fine flock.
  (sing. / pl.) Very fine, sifted, woolen refuse, especially that from shearing the nap of cloths, used as a coating for wall paper to give it a velvety or clothlike appearance; also, the dust of vegetable fiber used for a similar purpose.

flockingnoun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Flock

flocklingnoun (n.) A lamb.

flockyadjective (a.) Abounding with flocks; floccose.

floenoun (n.) A low, flat mass of floating ice.

floggingnoun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Flog
 noun (a. & n.) from Flog, v. t.

floggernoun (n.) One who flogs.
 noun (n.) A kind of mallet for beating the bung stave of a cask to start the bung.

flonnoun (n. pl.) See Flo.
  (pl. ) of Flo

floodingnoun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Flood
 noun (n.) The filling or covering with water or other fluid; overflow; inundation; the filling anything to excess.
 noun (n.) An abnormal or excessive discharge of blood from the uterus.

floodagenoun (n.) Inundation.

floodernoun (n.) One who floods anything.

flooknoun (n.) A fluke of an anchor.

flookannoun (n.) Alt. of Flukan

flookyadjective (a.) Fluky.

floornoun (n.) The bottom or lower part of any room; the part upon which we stand and upon which the movables in the room are supported.
 noun (n.) The structure formed of beams, girders, etc., with proper covering, which divides a building horizontally into stories. Floor in sense 1 is, then, the upper surface of floor in sense 2.
 noun (n.) The surface, or the platform, of a structure on which we walk or travel; as, the floor of a bridge.
 noun (n.) A story of a building. See Story.
 noun (n.) The part of the house assigned to the members.
 noun (n.) The right to speak.
 noun (n.) That part of the bottom of a vessel on each side of the keelson which is most nearly horizontal.
 noun (n.) The rock underlying a stratified or nearly horizontal deposit.
 noun (n.) A horizontal, flat ore body.
 verb (v. t.) To cover with a floor; to furnish with a floor; as, to floor a house with pine boards.
 verb (v. t.) To strike down or lay level with the floor; to knock down; hence, to silence by a conclusive answer or retort; as, to floor an opponent.
 verb (v. t.) To finish or make an end of; as, to floor a college examination.

flooringnoun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Floor
 noun (n.) A platform; the bottom of a room; a floor; pavement. See Floor, n.
 noun (n.) Material for the construction of a floor or floors.

flooragenoun (n.) Floor space.

floorernoun (n.) Anything that floors or upsets a person, as a blow that knocks him down; a conclusive answer or retort; a task that exceeds one's abilities.

floorheadsnoun (n. pl.) The upper extermities of the floor of a vessel.

floorlessadjective (a.) Having no floor.

floorwalkernoun (n.) One who walks about in a large retail store as an overseer and director.

floppingnoun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Flop

flopnoun (n.) Act of flopping.
 verb (v. t.) To clap or strike, as a bird its wings, a fish its tail, etc.; to flap.
 verb (v. t.) To turn suddenly, as something broad and flat.
 verb (v. i.) To strike about with something broad abd flat, as a fish with its tail, or a bird with its wings; to rise and fall; as, the brim of a hat flops.
 verb (v. i.) To fall, sink, or throw one's self, heavily, clumsily, and unexpectedly on the ground.

floppynoun (n.) Having a tendency to flop or flap; as, a floppy hat brim.

flopwingnoun (n.) The lapwing.

floscularadjective (a.) Flosculous.

flosculariannoun (n.) One of a group of stalked rotifers, having ciliated tentacles around the lobed disk.

flosculenoun (n.) A floret.

flosculousadjective (a.) Consisting of many gamopetalous florets.

floshnoun (n.) A hopper-shaped box or /nortar in which ore is placed for the action of the stamps.

flossnoun (n.) The slender styles of the pistillate flowers of maize; also called silk.
 noun (n.) Untwisted filaments of silk, used in embroidering.
 noun (n.) A small stream of water.
 noun (n.) Fluid glass floating on iron in the puddling furnace, produced by the vitrification of oxides and earths which are present.
 noun (n.) A body feather of an ostrich. Flosses are soft, and gray from the female and black from the male.

ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH FLORİA:

English Words which starts with 'fl' and ends with 'ia':