BIRDE - Name Report For First Name BIRDE:
First name BIRDE's origin is English. BIRDE
means "bird". You can find other first names
and English words that rhymes with BIRDE
below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according
to the first letters, last letters and first&last
letters of birde.(Brown
names are of the same origin (English) with BIRDE
and Red names are first
names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming BIRDE
English Words Rhyming BIRDE
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES BÝRDE AS A WHOLE:| birder | noun (n.) A birdcatcher. |
| blackbirder | noun (n.) A slave ship; a slaver. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH BÝRDE (According to last letters):Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (irde) - English Words That Ends with irde:Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (rde) - English Words That Ends with rde:| barde | noun (n.) A piece of defensive (or, sometimes, ornamental) armor for a horse's neck, breast, and flanks; a barb. [Often in the pl.] | | | (pl.) Defensive armor formerly worn by a man at arms. | | | (pl.) A thin slice of fat bacon used to cover any meat or game. |
| gailliarde | noun (n.) A lively French and Italian dance. |
| gourde | noun (n.) A silver dollar; -- so called in Cuba, Hayti, etc. |
| gueparde | noun (n.) The cheetah. |
| horde | noun (n.) A wandering troop or gang; especially, a clan or tribe of a nomadic people migrating from place to place for the sake of pasturage, plunder, etc.; a predatory multitude. |
| misericorde | noun (n.) Compassion; pity; mercy. | | | noun (n.) Same as Misericordia, 2. |
| passegarde | noun (n.) A ridge or projecting edge on a shoulder piece to turn the blow of a lance or other weapon from the joint of the armor. |
| sauvegarde | noun (n.) The monitor. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH BÝRDE (According to first letters):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. |
| birdie | noun (n.) A pretty or dear little bird; -- a pet name. |
| birdikin | noun (n.) A young bird. |
| birding | noun (n.) Birdcatching or fowling. |
| 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 BÝRDE:English Words which starts with 'bi' and ends with 'de':| bichloride | noun (n.) A compound consisting of two atoms of chlorine with one or more atoms of another element; -- called also dichloride. |
| bicyanide | noun (n.) See Dicyanide. |
| biniodide | noun (n.) Same as Diiodide. |
| binoxide | noun (n.) Same as Dioxide. |
| bisulphide | noun (n.) A sulphide having two atoms of sulphur in the molecule; a disulphide, as in iron pyrites, FeS2; -- less frequently called bisulphuret. |
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