NIRIT - Name Report For First Name NIRIT:
First name NIRIT's origin is Other. NIRIT
means "plant". You can find other first names
and English words that rhymes with NIRIT
below. Ryhme list involves the matching sounds according
to the first letters, last letters and first&last
letters of nirit.(Brown
names are of the same origin (Other) with NIRIT
and Red names are first
names with English/Anglo-Saxon origin)
First Names Rhyming NIRIT
English Words Rhyming NIRIT
ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES NÝRÝT AS A WHOLE: ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH NÝRÝT (According to last letters):Rhyming Words According to Last 4 Letters (irit) - English Words That Ends with irit:| spirit | noun (n.) Air set in motion by breathing; breath; hence, sometimes, life itself. | | | noun (n.) A rough breathing; an aspirate, as the letter h; also, a mark to denote aspiration; a breathing. | | | noun (n.) Life, or living substance, considered independently of corporeal existence; an intelligence conceived of apart from any physical organization or embodiment; vital essence, force, or energy, as distinct from matter. | | | noun (n.) The intelligent, immaterial and immortal part of man; the soul, in distinction from the body in which it resides; the agent or subject of vital and spiritual functions, whether spiritual or material. | | | noun (n.) Specifically, a disembodied soul; the human soul after it has left the body. | | | noun (n.) Any supernatural being, good or bad; an apparition; a specter; a ghost; also, sometimes, a sprite,; a fairy; an elf. | | | noun (n.) Energy, vivacity, ardor, enthusiasm, courage, etc. | | | noun (n.) One who is vivacious or lively; one who evinces great activity or peculiar characteristics of mind or temper; as, a ruling spirit; a schismatic spirit. | | | noun (n.) Temper or disposition of mind; mental condition or disposition; intellectual or moral state; -- often in the plural; as, to be cheerful, or in good spirits; to be downhearted, or in bad spirits. | | | noun (n.) Intent; real meaning; -- opposed to the letter, or to formal statement; also, characteristic quality, especially such as is derived from the individual genius or the personal character; as, the spirit of an enterprise, of a document, or the like. | | | noun (n.) Tenuous, volatile, airy, or vapory substance, possessed of active qualities. | | | noun (n.) Any liquid produced by distillation; especially, alcohol, the spirits, or spirit, of wine (it having been first distilled from wine): -- often in the plural. | | | noun (n.) Rum, whisky, brandy, gin, and other distilled liquors having much alcohol, in distinction from wine and malt liquors. | | | noun (n.) A solution in alcohol of a volatile principle. Cf. Tincture. | | | noun (n.) Any one of the four substances, sulphur, sal ammoniac, quicksilver, or arsenic (or, according to some, orpiment). | | | noun (n.) Stannic chloride. See under Stannic. | | | verb (v. t.) To animate with vigor; to excite; to encourage; to inspirit; as, civil dissensions often spirit the ambition of private men; -- sometimes followed by up. | | | verb (v. t.) To convey rapidly and secretly, or mysteriously, as if by the agency of a spirit; to kidnap; -- often with away, or off. |
Rhyming Words According to Last 3 Letters (rit) - English Words That Ends with rit:| afrit | noun (n.) Alt. of Afreet |
| boltsprit | noun (n.) See Bowsprit. |
| bowsprit | noun (n.) A large boom or spar, which projects over the stem of a ship or other vessel, to carry sail forward. |
| brit | noun (n.) Alt. of Britt |
| cabrit | noun (n.) Same as Cabree. |
| demerit | noun (n.) That which one merits or deserves, either of good or ill; desert. | | | noun (n.) That which deserves blame; ill desert; a fault; a vice; misconduct; -- the opposite of merit. | | | noun (n.) The state of one who deserves ill. | | | noun (n.) To deserve; -- said in reference to both praise and blame. | | | noun (n.) To depreciate or cry down. | | | verb (v. i.) To deserve praise or blame. |
| grit | noun (n.) Sand or gravel; rough, hard particles. | | | noun (n.) The coarse part of meal. | | | noun (n.) Grain, esp. oats or wheat, hulled and coarsely ground; in high milling, fragments of cracked wheat smaller than groats. | | | noun (n.) A hard, coarse-grained siliceous sandstone; as, millstone grit; -- called also gritrock and gritstone. The name is also applied to a finer sharp-grained sandstone; as, grindstone grit. | | | noun (n.) Structure, as adapted to grind or sharpen; as, a hone of good grit. | | | noun (n.) Firmness of mind; invincible spirit; unyielding courage; fortitude. | | | verb (v. i.) To give forth a grating sound, as sand under the feet; to grate; to grind. | | | verb (v. t.) To grind; to rub harshly together; to grate; as, to grit the teeth. |
| immerit | noun (n.) Want of worth; demerit. |
| merit | noun (n.) The quality or state of deserving well or ill; desert. | | | noun (n.) Esp. in a good sense: The quality or state of deserving well; worth; excellence. | | | noun (n.) Reward deserved; any mark or token of excellence or approbation; as, his teacher gave him ten merits. | | | noun (n.) To earn by service or performance; to have a right to claim as reward; to deserve; sometimes, to deserve in a bad sense; as, to merit punishment. | | | noun (n.) To reward. | | | verb (v. i.) To acquire desert; to gain value; to receive benefit; to profit. |
| overmerit | noun (n.) Excessive merit. |
| peagrit | noun (n.) A coarse pisolitic limestone. See Pisolite. |
| prakrit | noun (n.) Any one of the popular dialects descended from, or akin to, Sanskrit; -- in distinction from the Sanskrit, which was used as a literary and learned language when no longer spoken by the people. Pali is one of the Prakrit dialects. |
| preterit | noun (n.) The preterit; also, a word in the preterit tense. | | | adjective (a.) Past; -- applied to a tense which expresses an action or state as past. | | | adjective (a.) Belonging wholly to the past; passed by. |
| sanscrit | noun (n.) See Sanskrit. |
| sanskrit | noun (n.) The ancient language of the Hindoos, long since obsolete in vernacular use, but preserved to the present day as the literary and sacred dialect of India. It is nearly allied to the Persian, and to the principal languages of Europe, classical and modern, and by its more perfect preservation of the roots and forms of the primitive language from which they are all descended, is a most important assistance in determining their history and relations. Cf. Prakrit, and Veda. | | | adjective (a.) Of or pertaining to Sanskrit; written in Sanskrit; as, a Sanskrit dictionary or inscription. |
| scrit | noun (n.) Writing; document; scroll. |
| scurrit | noun (n.) the lesser tern (Sterna minuta). |
| sprit | noun (n.) A shoot; a sprout. | | | verb (v. i.) To throw out with force from a narrow orifice; to eject; to spurt out. | | | verb (v. t.) To sprout; to bud; to germinate, as barley steeped for malt. | | | verb (v. i.) A small boom, pole, or spar, which crosses the sail of a boat diagonally from the mast to the upper aftmost corner, which it is used to extend and elevate. |
| tirrit | noun (n.) A word from the vocabulary of Mrs. Quickly, the hostess in Shakespeare's Henry IV., probably meaning terror. |
| worrit | noun (n.) Worry; anxiety. | | | verb (v. t.) To worry; to annoy. |
| writ | noun (n.) That which is written; writing; scripture; -- applied especially to the Scriptures, or the books of the Old and New testaments; as, sacred writ. | | | noun (n.) An instrument in writing, under seal, in an epistolary form, issued from the proper authority, commanding the performance or nonperformance of some act by the person to whom it is directed; as, a writ of entry, of error, of execution, of injunction, of mandamus, of return, of summons, and the like. | | | (obs.) 3d pers. sing. pres. of Write, for writeth. | | | () imp. & p. p. of Write. | | | (Archaic imp. & p. p.) of Write |
ENGLISH WORDS RHYMING WITH NÝRÝT (According to first letters):Rhyming Words According to First 4 Letters (niri) - Words That Begins with niri:Rhyming Words According to First 3 Letters (nir) - Words That Begins with nir:| nirvana | noun (n.) In the Buddhist system of religion, the final emancipation of the soul from transmigration, and consequently a beatific enfrachisement from the evils of wordly existence, as by annihilation or absorption into the divine. See Buddhism. |
ENGLISH WORDS BOTH FIRST AND LAST LETTERS RHYMING WITH NÝRÝT:English Words which starts with 'ni' and ends with 'it':
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