First Names Rhyming ISAURE
English Words Rhyming ISAURE
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES ÝSAURE AS A WHOLE:
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ÝSAURE (According to last letters):
Rhyming Words According to Last 5 Letters (saure) - English Words That Ends with saure:
Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (aure) - English Words That Ends with aure:
| roquelaure | noun (n.) A cloak reaching about to, or just below, the knees, worn in the 18th century. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (ure) - English Words That Ends with ure:
| abature | noun (n.) Grass and sprigs beaten or trampled down by a stag passing through them. |
| abbreviature | noun (n.) An abbreviation; an abbreviated state or form. |
| | noun (n.) An abridgment; a compendium or abstract. |
| acclimature | noun (n.) The act of acclimating, or the state of being acclimated. |
| acupressure | noun (n.) A mode of arresting hemorrhage resulting from wounds or surgical operations, by passing under the divided vessel a needle, the ends of which are left exposed externally on the cutaneous surface. |
| acupuncture | noun (n.) Pricking with a needle; a needle prick. |
| | noun (n.) The insertion of needles into the living tissues for remedial purposes. |
| | verb (v. t.) To treat with acupuncture. |
| adjudicature | noun (n.) Adjudication. |
| admixture | noun (n.) The act of mixing; mixture. |
| | noun (n.) The compound formed by mixing different substances together. |
| | noun (n.) That which is mixed with anything. |
| adventure | noun (n.) That which happens without design; chance; hazard; hap; hence, chance of danger or loss. |
| | noun (n.) Risk; danger; peril. |
| | noun (n.) The encountering of risks; hazardous and striking enterprise; a bold undertaking, in which hazards are to be encountered, and the issue is staked upon unforeseen events; a daring feat. |
| | noun (n.) A remarkable occurrence; a striking event; a stirring incident; as, the adventures of one's life. |
| | noun (n.) A mercantile or speculative enterprise of hazard; a venture; a shipment by a merchant on his own account. |
| | noun (n.) To risk, or hazard; jeopard; to venture. |
| | noun (n.) To venture upon; to run the risk of; to dare. |
| | verb (v. i.) To try the chance; to take the risk. |
| affixture | noun (n.) The act of affixing, or the state of being affixed; attachment. |
| agriculture | noun (n.) The art or science of cultivating the ground, including the harvesting of crops, and the rearing and management of live stock; tillage; husbandry; farming. |
| alcoholature | noun (n.) An alcoholic tincture prepared with fresh plants. |
| allure | noun (n.) Allurement. |
| | noun (n.) Gait; bearing. |
| | verb (v. t.) To attempt to draw; to tempt by a lure or bait, that is, by the offer of some good, real or apparent; to invite by something flattering or acceptable; to entice; to attract. |
| alure | noun (n.) A walk or passage; -- applied to passages of various kinds. |
| anfracture | noun (n.) A mazy winding. |
| antestature | noun (n.) A small intrenchment or work of palisades, or of sacks of earth. |
| aperture | noun (n.) The act of opening. |
| | noun (n.) An opening; an open space; a gap, cleft, or chasm; a passage perforated; a hole; as, an aperture in a wall. |
| | noun (n.) The diameter of the exposed part of the object glass of a telescope or other optical instrument; as, a telescope of four-inch aperture. |
| apiculture | noun (n.) Rearing of bees for their honey and wax. |
| aquapuncture | noun (n.) The introduction of water subcutaneously for the relief of pain. |
| arboriculture | noun (n.) The cultivation of trees and shrubs, chiefly for timber or for ornamental purposes. |
| architecture | noun (n.) The art or science of building; especially, the art of building houses, churches, bridges, and other structures, for the purposes of civil life; -- often called civil architecture. |
| | noun (n.) Construction, in a more general sense; frame or structure; workmanship. |
| armature | noun (n.) Armor; whatever is worn or used for the protection and defense of the body, esp. the protective outfit of some animals and plants. |
| | noun (n.) A piece of soft iron used to connect the two poles of a magnet, or electro-magnet, in order to complete the circuit, or to receive and apply the magnetic force. In the ordinary horseshoe magnet, it serves to prevent the dissipation of the magnetic force. |
| | noun (n.) Iron bars or framing employed for the consolidation of a building, as in sustaining slender columns, holding up canopies, etc. |
| | noun (n.) That part of a dynamo or electric generator or of an electric motor in which a current is induced by a relatively moving magnetic field. The armature usually consists of a series of coils or groups of insulated conductors surrounding a core of iron. |
| armure | noun (n.) Armor. |
| | noun (n.) A variety of twilled fabric ribbed on the surface. |
| attainture | noun (n.) Attainder; disgrace. |
| aventure | noun (n.) Accident; chance; adventure. |
| | noun (n.) A mischance causing a person's death without felony, as by drowning, or falling into the fire. |
| aviculture | noun (n.) Rearing and care of birds. |
| azure | noun (n.) The lapis lazuli. |
| | noun (n.) The clear blue color of the sky; also, a pigment or dye of this color. |
| | noun (n.) The blue vault above; the unclouded sky. |
| | noun (n.) A blue color, represented in engraving by horizontal parallel lines. |
| | adjective (a.) Sky-blue; resembling the clear blue color of the unclouded sky; cerulean; also, cloudless. |
| | verb (v. t.) To color blue. |
| batture | noun (n.) An elevated river bed or sea bed. |
| bordure | noun (n.) A border one fifth the width of the shield, surrounding the field. It is usually plain, but may be charged. |
| breviature | noun (n.) An abbreviature; an abbreviation. |
| brisure | noun (n.) Any part of a rampart or parapet which deviates from the general direction. |
| | noun (n.) A mark of cadency or difference. |
| calenture | noun (n.) A name formerly given to various fevers occuring in tropics; esp. to a form of furious delirium accompanied by fever, among sailors, which sometimes led the affected person to imagine the sea to be a green field, and to throw himself into it. |
| | verb (v. i.) To see as in the delirium of one affected with calenture. |
| candidature | noun (n.) Candidacy. |
| capillature | noun (n.) A bush of hair; frizzing of the hair. |
| capture | noun (n.) The act of seizing by force, or getting possession of by superior power or by stratagem; as, the capture of an enemy, a vessel, or a criminal. |
| | noun (n.) The securing of an object of strife or desire, as by the power of some attraction. |
| | noun (n.) The thing taken by force, surprise, or stratagem; a prize; prey. |
| | verb (v. t.) To seize or take possession of by force, surprise, or stratagem; to overcome and hold; to secure by effort. |
| celature | noun (n.) The act or art of engraving or embossing. |
| | noun (n.) That which is engraved. |
| celsiture | noun (n.) Height; altitude. |
| censure | noun (n.) Judgment either favorable or unfavorable; opinion. |
| | noun (n.) The act of blaming or finding fault with and condemning as wrong; reprehension; blame. |
| | noun (n.) Judicial or ecclesiastical sentence or reprimand; condemnatory judgment. |
| | verb (v. i.) To form or express a judgment in regard to; to estimate; to judge. |
| | verb (v. i.) To find fault with and condemn as wrong; to blame; to express disapprobation of. |
| | verb (v. i.) To condemn or reprimand by a judicial or ecclesiastical sentence. |
| | verb (v. i.) To judge. |
| chaussure | noun (n.) A foot covering of any kind. |
| chevelure | noun (n.) A hairlike envelope. |
| cincture | noun (n.) A belt, a girdle, or something worn round the body, -- as by an ecclesiastic for confining the alb. |
| | noun (n.) That which encompasses or incloses; an inclosure. |
| | noun (n.) The fillet, listel, or band next to the apophyge at the extremity of the shaft of a column. |
| ciselure | noun (n.) The process of chasing on metals; also, the work thus chased. |
| clausure | noun (n.) The act of shutting up or confining; confinement. |
| climature | noun (n.) A climate. |
| cloture | noun (n.) See Closure, 5. |
| coadventure | noun (n.) An adventure in which two or more persons are partakers. |
| | verb (v. i.) To share in a venture. |
| cocksure | adjective (a.) Perfectly safe. |
| | adjective (a.) Quite certain. |
| coiffure | noun (n.) A headdress, or manner of dressing the hair. |
| colature | noun (n.) The process of straining; the matter strained; a strainer. |
| colorature | noun (n.) Vocal music colored, as it were, by florid ornaments, runs, or rapid passages. |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH ÝSAURE (According to first letters):
Rhyming Words According to First 5 Letters (isaur) - Words That Begins with isaur:
Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (isau) - Words That Begins with isau:
Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (isa) - Words That Begins with isa:
| isabelline | adjective (a.) Of an isabel or isabella color. |
| isagelous | adjective (a.) Containing the same information; as, isagelous sentences. |
| isagel | noun (n.) One of two or more objects containing the same information. |
| isagoge | noun (n.) An introduction. |
| isagogic | adjective (a.) Alt. of Isagogical |
| isagogical | adjective (a.) Introductory; especially, introductory to the study of theology. |
| isagogics | noun (n.) That part of theological science directly preliminary to actual exegesis, or interpretation of the Scriptures. |
| isagon | adjective (a.) A figure or polygon whose angles are equal. |
| isapostolic | adjective (a.) Having equal, or almost equal, authority with the apostles of their teachings. |
| isatic | adjective (a.) Alt. of Isatinic |
| isatinic | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or derived from, isatin; as, isatic acid, which is also called trioxindol. |
| isatide | noun (n.) A white crystalline substance obtained by the partial reduction of isatin. |
| isatin | noun (n.) An orange-red crystalline substance, C8H5NO2, obtained by the oxidation of indigo blue. It is also produced from certain derivatives of benzoic acid, and is one important source of artificial indigo. |
| isatis | noun (n.) A genus of herbs, some species of which, especially the Isatis tinctoria, yield a blue dye similar to indigo; woad. |
| isatogen | noun (n.) A complex nitrogenous radical, C8H4NO2, regarded as the essential residue of a series of compounds, related to isatin, which easily pass by reduction to indigo blue. |
| isatropic | adjective (a.) Pertaining to, or designating, an acid obtained from atropine, and isomeric with cinnamic acid. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH ÝSAURE:
English Words which starts with 'is' and ends with 're':
| isothere | noun (n.) A line connecting points on the earth's surface having the same mean summer temperature. |
| isomere | noun (n.) A homologous or corresponding part or segment. |
| | noun (n.) = Isomer. |
| isospore | noun (n.) One of the spores produced by an isosporous organism. |
| | noun (n.) A zygospore. |