MANABA - Name Report For First Name MANABA:
First name MANABA's origin is Native American. MANABA
means "navajo name meaning " return to war."". You can find other first names
and English words that rhymes with MANABA
below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according
to the first letters, last letters and first&last
letters of manaba.(Brown
names are of the same origin (Native American) with MANABA
and Red names are first
names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming MANABA
English Words Rhyming MANABA
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES MANABA AS A WHOLE: ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH MANABA (According to last letters):Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (anaba) - English Words That Ends with anaba:Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (naba) - English Words That Ends with naba:Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (aba) - English Words That Ends with aba:| araba | noun (n.) A wagon or cart, usually heavy and without springs, and often covered. |
| baba | noun (n.) A kind of plum cake. |
| caaba | noun (n.) The small and nearly cubical stone building, toward which all Mohammedans must pray. |
| piacaba | noun (n.) See Piassava. |
| wallaba | noun (n.) A leguminous tree (Eperua falcata) of Demerara, with pinnate leaves and clusters of red flowers. The reddish brown wood is used for palings and shingles. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH MANABA (According to first letters):Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (manab) - Words That Begins with manab:| manable | adjective (a.) Marriageable. |
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (mana) - Words That Begins with mana:| manace | noun (n. & v.) Same as Menace. |
| manacle | noun (n.) A handcuff; a shackle for the hand or wrist; -- usually in the plural. | | | verb (v. t.) To put handcuffs or other fastening upon, for confining the hands; to shackle; to confine; to restrain from the use of the limbs or natural powers. |
| manacling | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Manacle |
| manage | noun (n.) The handling or government of anything, but esp. of a horse; management; administration. See Manege. | | | noun (n.) To have under control and direction; to conduct; to guide; to administer; to treat; to handle. | | | noun (n.) Hence: Esp., to guide by careful or delicate treatment; to wield with address; to make subservient by artful conduct; to bring around cunningly to one's plans. | | | noun (n.) To train in the manege, as a horse; to exercise in graceful or artful action. | | | noun (n.) To treat with care; to husband. | | | noun (n.) To bring about; to contrive. | | | verb (v. i.) To direct affairs; to carry on business or affairs; to administer. |
| managing | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Manage |
| manageability | noun (n.) The state or quality of being manageable; manageableness. |
| manageable | adjective (a.) Such as can be managed or used; suffering control; governable; tractable; subservient; as, a manageable horse. |
| manageless | adjective (a.) Unmanageable. |
| manager | noun (n.) One who manages; a conductor or director; as, the manager of a theater. | | | noun (n.) A person who conducts business or household affairs with economy and frugality; a good economist. | | | noun (n.) A contriver; an intriguer. |
| managerial | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to management or a manager; as, managerial qualities. |
| managership | noun (n.) The office or position of a manager. |
| managery | noun (n.) Management; manner of using; conduct; direction. | | | noun (n.) Husbandry; economy; frugality. |
| manakin | noun (n.) Any one of numerous small birds belonging to Pipra, Manacus, and other genera of the family Pipridae. They are mostly natives of Central and South America. some are bright-colored, and others have the wings and tail curiously ornamented. The name is sometimes applied to related birds of other families. | | | noun (n.) A dwarf. See Manikin. |
| manatee | noun (n.) Any species of Trichechus, a genus of sirenians; -- called alsosea cow. |
| manation | noun (n.) The act of issuing or flowing out. |
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (man) - Words That Begins with man:| maneticness | noun (n.) Magneticalness. |
| man | noun (n.) A human being; -- opposed tobeast. | | | noun (n.) Especially: An adult male person; a grown-up male person, as distinguished from a woman or a child. | | | noun (n.) The human race; mankind. | | | noun (n.) The male portion of the human race. | | | noun (n.) One possessing in a high degree the distinctive qualities of manhood; one having manly excellence of any kind. | | | noun (n.) An adult male servant; also, a vassal; a subject. | | | noun (n.) A term of familiar address often implying on the part of the speaker some degree of authority, impatience, or haste; as, Come, man, we 've no time to lose! | | | noun (n.) A married man; a husband; -- correlative to wife. | | | noun (n.) One, or any one, indefinitely; -- a modified survival of the Saxon use of man, or mon, as an indefinite pronoun. | | | noun (n.) One of the piece with which certain games, as chess or draughts, are played. | | | verb (v. t.) To supply with men; to furnish with a sufficient force or complement of men, as for management, service, defense, or the like; to guard; as, to man a ship, boat, or fort. | | | verb (v. t.) To furnish with strength for action; to prepare for efficiency; to fortify. | | | verb (v. t.) To tame, as a hawk. | | | verb (v. t.) To furnish with a servants. | | | verb (v. t.) To wait on as a manservant. |
| manning | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Man |
| manbote | noun (n.) A sum paid to a lord as a pecuniary compensation for killing his man (that is, his vassal, servant, or tenant). |
| manca | noun (n.) See Mancus. |
| manche | noun (n.) A sleeve. |
| manchet | noun (n.) Fine white bread; a loaf of fine bread. |
| manchineel | noun (n.) A euphorbiaceous tree (Hippomane Mancinella) of tropical America, having a poisonous and blistering milky juice, and poisonous acrid fruit somewhat resembling an apple. |
| manchu | noun (n.) A native or inhabitant of Manchuria; also, the language spoken by the Manchus. | | | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to Manchuria or its inhabitants. |
| mancipation | noun (n.) Slavery; involuntary servitude. |
| manciple | noun (n.) A steward; a purveyor, particularly of a college or Inn of Court. |
| mancus | noun (n.) An old Anglo Saxon coin both of gold and silver, and of variously estimated values. The silver mancus was equal to about one shilling of modern English money. |
| mandamus | noun (n.) A writ issued by a superior court and directed to some inferior tribunal, or to some corporation or person exercising authority, commanding the performance of some specified duty. |
| mandarin | noun (n.) A Chinese public officer or nobleman; a civil or military official in China and Annam. | | | noun (n.) A small orange, with easily separable rind. It is thought to be of Chinese origin, and is counted a distinct species (Citrus nobilis)mandarin orange; tangerine --. |
| mandarinate | noun (n.) The collective body of officials or persons of rank in China. |
| mandarinic | adjective (a.) Appropriate or peculiar to a mandarin. |
| mandarining | noun (n.) The process of giving an orange color to goods formed of animal tissue, as silk or wool, not by coloring matter, but by producing a certain change in the fiber by the action of dilute nitric acid. |
| mandarinism | noun (n.) A government mandarins; character or spirit of the mandarins. |
| mandatary | noun (n.) One to whom a command or charge is given; hence, specifically, a person to whom the pope has, by his prerogative, given a mandate or order for his benefice. | | | noun (n.) One who undertakes to discharge a specific business commission; a mandatory. |
| mandate | noun (n.) An official or authoritative command; an order or injunction; a commission; a judicial precept. | | | noun (n.) A rescript of the pope, commanding an ordinary collator to put the person therein named in possession of the first vacant benefice in his collation. | | | noun (n.) A contract by which one employs another to manage any business for him. By the Roman law, it must have been gratuitous. |
| mandator | noun (n.) A director; one who gives a mandate or order. | | | noun (n.) The person who employs another to perform a mandate. |
| mandatory | noun (n.) Same as Mandatary. | | | adjective (a.) Containing a command; preceptive; directory. |
| mandelate | noun (n.) A salt of mandelic acid. |
| mandelic | adjective (a.) Pertaining to an acid first obtained from benzoic aldehyde (oil of better almonds), as a white crystalline substance; -- called also phenyl glycolic acid. |
| manderil | noun (n.) A mandrel. |
| mandible | noun (n.) The bone, or principal bone, of the lower jaw; the inferior maxilla; -- also applied to either the upper or the lower jaw in the beak of birds. | | | noun (n.) The anterior pair of mouth organs of insects, crustaceaus, and related animals, whether adapted for biting or not. See Illust. of Diptera. |
| mandibular | noun (n.) The principal mandibular bone; the mandible. | | | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to a mandible; like a mandible. |
| mandibulate | noun (n.) An insect having mandibles. | | | adjective (a.) Alt. of Mandibulated |
| mandibulated | adjective (a.) Provided with mandibles adapted for biting, as many insects. |
| mandibuliform | adjective (a.) Having the form of a mandible; -- said especially of the maxillae of an insect when hard and adapted for biting. |
| mandibulohyoid | adjective (a.) Pertaining both to the mandibular and the hyoid arch, or situated between them. |
| mandil | noun (n.) A loose outer garment worn the 16th and 17th centuries. |
| mandilion | noun (n.) See Mandil. |
| mandingos | noun (n. pl.) ; sing. Mandingo. (Ethnol.) An extensive and powerful tribe of West African negroes. |
| mandioc | noun (n.) Alt. of Mandioca |
| mandioca | noun (n.) See Manioc. |
| mandlestone | noun (n.) Amygdaloid. |
| mandment | noun (n.) Commandment. |
| mandolin | noun (n.) Alt. of Mandoline |
| mandoline | noun (n.) A small and beautifully shaped instrument resembling the lute. |
| mandore | noun (n.) A kind of four-stringed lute. |
| mandragora | noun (n.) A genus of plants; the mandrake. See Mandrake, 1. |
| mandragorite | noun (n.) One who habitually intoxicates himself with a narcotic obtained from mandrake. |
| mandrake | noun (n.) A low plant (Mandragora officinarum) of the Nightshade family, having a fleshy root, often forked, and supposed to resemble a man. It was therefore supposed to have animal life, and to cry out when pulled up. All parts of the plant are strongly narcotic. It is found in the Mediterranean region. | | | noun (n.) The May apple (Podophyllum peltatum). See May apple under May, and Podophyllum. |
| mandrel | noun (n.) A bar of metal inserted in the work to shape it, or to hold it, as in a lathe, during the process of manufacture; an arbor. | | | noun (n.) The live spindle of a turning lathe; the revolving arbor of a circular saw. It is usually driven by a pulley. |
| mandrill | noun (n.) a large West African baboon (Cynocephalus, / Papio, mormon). The adult male has, on the sides of the nose, large, naked, grooved swellings, conspicuously striped with blue and red. |
| manducable | adjective (a.) Such as can be chewed; fit to be eaten. |
| manducating | noun (p. pr. & vb. n.) of Manducate |
| manducation | noun (n.) The act of chewing. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH MANABA:English Words which starts with 'ma' and ends with 'ba':| marimba | noun (n.) A musical istrument of percussion, consisting of bars yielding musical tones when struck. |
|