Name Report For First Name FLORUS:

FLORUS

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

Rhymes with FLORUS - Names & Words

First Names Rhyming FLORUS

FIRST NAMES WHICH INCLUDES FLORUS AS A WHOLE:

 

NAMES RHYMING WITH FLORUS (According to last letters):

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

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

theodorus horus seorus archemorus polydorus

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

butrus peredurus ondrus brus abderus cerberus cyrus eurus icarus irus pandarus zephyrus ambrus jairus lazarus tyrus homerus petrus

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

el-nefous enygeus caeneus cestus iasius lotus negus maccus dabbous dassous fanous abdul-quddus boulus yunus dryhus thaddeus bagdemagus brademagus isdernus britomartus luxovious nemausus argus ambrosius batholomeus basilius bonifacius cecilius clementius egidius eugenius eustatius darius aldous brutus cassibellaunus guiderius lorineus ferragus marsilius senapus marcus alemannus klaus absyrtus acastus achelous aconteus acrisius admetus adrastus aeacus aegeus aegisthus aegyptus aeolus aesculapius alcinous alcyoneus aloeus alpheus amphiaraus amycus anastasius ancaeus androgeus antaeus antilochus antinous aristaeus ascalaphus asopus atreus autolycus avernus boethius briareus

NAMES RHYMING WITH FLORUS (According to first letters):

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

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 flori floria floriana florica florida florin florina florinda florinia florinio florismart florita florka florrie

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 FLORUS:

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

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

faras farees faris farris farrs fars fearghus felicitas felis feodras fercos ferghus ferghuss fergus ferris firas firdaws firdoos fitzjames fitzsimmons fitzsimons forbes francois frans

English Words Rhyming FLORUS

ENGLISH WORDS WHICH INCLUDES FLORUS AS A WHOLE:



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


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


pylorusnoun (n.) The opening from the stomach into the intestine.
 noun (n.) A posterior division of the stomach in some invertebrates.

pelorusnoun (n.) An instrument similar to a mariner's compass, but without magnetic needles, and having two sight vanes by which bearings are taken, esp. such as cannot be taken by the compass.


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


bosporusnoun (n.) A strait or narrow sea between two seas, or a lake and a seas; as, the Bosporus (formerly the Thracian Bosporus) or Strait of Constantinople, between the Black Sea and Sea of Marmora; the Cimmerian Bosporus, between the Black Sea and Sea of Azof.

chorusnoun (n.) A band of singers and dancers.
 noun (n.) A company of persons supposed to behold what passed in the acts of a tragedy, and to sing the sentiments which the events suggested in couplets or verses between the acts; also, that which was thus sung by the chorus.
 noun (n.) An interpreter in a dumb show or play.
 noun (n.) A company of singers singing in concert.
 noun (n.) A composition of two or more parts, each of which is intended to be sung by a number of voices.
 noun (n.) Parts of a song or hymn recurring at intervals, as at the end of stanzas; also, a company of singers who join with the singer or choir in singer or choir in singing such parts.
 noun (n.) The simultaneous of a company in any noisy demonstration; as, a Chorus of shouts and catcalls.
 verb (v. i.) To sing in chorus; to exclaim simultaneously.

corchorusnoun (n.) The common name of the Kerria Japonica or Japan globeflower, a yellow-flowered, perennial, rosaceous plant, seen in old-fashioned gardens.

cryophorusnoun (n.) An instrument used to illustrate the freezing of water by its own evaporation. The ordinary form consists of two glass bulbs, connected by a tube of the same material, and containing only a quantity of water and its vapor, devoid of air. The water is in one of the bulbs, and freezes when the other is cooled below 32¡ Fahr.

electrophorusnoun (n.) An instrument for exciting electricity, and repeating the charge indefinitely by induction, consisting of a flat cake of resin, shelllac, or ebonite, upon which is placed a plate of metal.

morusnoun (n.) A genus of trees, some species of which produce edible fruit; the mulberry. See Mulberry.

phosphorusnoun (n.) The morning star; Phosphor.
 noun (n.) A poisonous nonmetallic element of the nitrogen group, obtained as a white, or yellowish, translucent waxy substance, having a characteristic disagreeable smell. It is very active chemically, must be preserved under water, and unites with oxygen even at ordinary temperatures, giving a faint glow, -- whence its name. It always occurs compined, usually in phosphates, as in the mineral apatite, in bones, etc. It is used in the composition on the tips of friction matches, and for many other purposes. The molecule contains four atoms. Symbol P. Atomic weight 31.0.
 noun (n.) Hence, any substance which shines in the dark like phosphorus, as certain phosphorescent bodies.

polyporusnoun (n.) A genus of fungi having the under surface full of minute pores; also, any fungus of this genus.

pyrophorusnoun (n.) Any one of several substances or mixtures which phosphoresce or ignite spontaneously on exposure to air, as a heated mixture of alum, potash, and charcoal, or a mixture of charcoal and finely divided lead.

semichorusnoun (n.) A half chorus; a passage to be sung by a selected portion of the voices, as the female voices only, in contrast with the full choir.

sorusnoun (n.) One of the fruit dots, or small clusters of sporangia, on the back of the fronds of ferns.
 noun (n.) In parasitic fungi, any mass of spores bursting through the epidermis of a host plant.
 noun (n.) In lichens, a heap of soredia on the thallus.

torusnoun (n.) A lage molding used in the bases of columns. Its profile is semicircular. See Illust. of Molding.
 noun (n.) One of the ventral parapodia of tubicolous annelids. It usually has the form of an oblong thickening or elevation of the integument with rows of uncini or hooks along the center. See Illust. under Tubicolae.
 noun (n.) The receptacle, or part of the flower on which the carpels stand.
 noun (n.) See 3d Tore, 2.


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


acarusnoun (n.) A genus including many species of small mites.

arcturusnoun (n.) A fixed star of the first magnitude in the constellation Bootes.

birrusnoun (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.

brontosaurusnoun (n.) A genus of American jurassic dinosaurs. A length of sixty feet is believed to have been attained by these reptiles.

camarasaurusnoun (n.) A genus of gigantic American Jurassic dinosaurs, having large cavities in the bodies of the dorsal vertebrae.

carusnoun (n.) Coma with complete insensibility; deep lethargy.

ceratosaurusnoun (n.) A carnivorous American Jurassic dinosaur allied to the European Megalosaurus. The animal was nearly twenty feet in length, and the skull bears a bony horn core on the united nasal bones. See Illustration in Appendix.

cerberusnoun (n.) A monster, in the shape of a three-headed dog, guarding the entrance into the infernal regions, Hence: Any vigilant custodian or guardian, esp. if surly.
 noun (n.) A genus of East Indian serpents, allied to the pythons; the bokadam.

churrusnoun (n.) A powerfully narcotic and intoxicating gum resin which exudes from the flower heads, seeds, etc., of Indian hemp.

cirrusnoun (n.) A tendril or clasper.
 noun (n.) A soft tactile appendage of the mantle of many Mollusca, and of the parapodia of Annelida. Those near the head of annelids are Tentacular cirri; those of the last segment are caudal cirri.
 noun (n.) The jointed, leglike organs of Cirripedia. See Annelida, and Polychaeta.
 noun (n.) The external male organ of trematodes and some other worms, and of certain Mollusca.
 noun (n.) See under Cloud.

citrusnoun (n.) A genus of trees including the orange, lemon, citron, etc., originally natives of southern Asia.

coenurusnoun (n.) The larval stage of a tapeworm (Taenia coenurus) which forms bladderlike sacs in the brain of sheep, causing the fatal disease known as water brain, vertigo, staggers or gid.

crusnoun (n.) That part of the hind limb between the femur, or thigh, and the ankle, or tarsus; the shank.
 noun (n.) Often applied, especially in the plural, to parts which are supposed to resemble a pair of legs; as, the crura of the diaphragm, a pair of muscles attached to it; crura cerebri, two bundles of nerve fibers in the base of the brain, connecting the medulla and the forebrain.

cyperusnoun (n.) A large genus of plants belonging to the Sedge family, and including the species called galingale, several bulrushes, and the Egyptian papyrus.

cyprusnoun (n.) A thin, transparent stuff, the same as, or corresponding to, crape. It was either white or black, the latter being most common, and used for mourning.

elasmosaurusnoun (n.) An extinct, long-necked, marine, cretaceous reptile from Kansas, allied to Plesiosaurus.

eosaurusnoun (n.) An extinct marine reptile from the coal measures of Nova Scotia; -- so named because supposed to be of the earliest known reptiles.

eurusnoun (n.) The east wind.

eurypterusnoun (n.) A genus of extinct Merostomata, found in Silurian rocks. Some of the species are more than three feet long.

gyrusnoun (n.) A convoluted ridge between grooves; a convolution; as, the gyri of the brain; the gyri of brain coral. See Brain.

hadrosaurusnoun (n.) An American herbivorous dinosaur of great size, allied to the iguanodon. It is found in the Cretaceous formation.

hesperusnoun (n.) Venus when she is the evening star; Hesper.
 noun (n.) Evening.

homarusnoun (n.) A genus of decapod Crustacea, including the common lobsters.

humerusnoun (n.) The bone of the brachium, or upper part of the arm or fore limb.
 noun (n.) The part of the limb containing the humerus; the brachium.

hydrusnoun (n.) A constellation of the southern hemisphere, near the south pole.

hylaeosaurusnoun (n.) A large Wealden dinosaur from the Tilgate Forest, England. It was about twenty feet long, protected by bony plates in the skin, and armed with spines.

ichthyosaurusnoun (n.) An extinct genus of marine reptiles; -- so named from their short, biconcave vertebrae, resembling those of fishes. Several species, varying in length from ten to thirty feet, are known from the Liassic, Oolitic, and Cretaceous formations.

icterusadjective (a.) The jaundice.

jeterusnoun (n.) A yellowness of the parts of plants which are normally green; yellows.

labrusnoun (n.) A genus of marine fishes, including the wrasses of Europe. See Wrasse.

laurusnoun (n.) A genus of trees including, according to modern authors, only the true laurel (Laurus nobilis), and the larger L. Canariensis of Madeira and the Canary Islands. Formerly the sassafras, the camphor tree, the cinnamon tree, and several other aromatic trees and shrubs, were also referred to the genus Laurus.

malapterurusnoun (n.) A genus of African siluroid fishes, including the electric catfishes. See Electric cat, under Electric.

mastodonsaurusnoun (n.) A large extinct genus of labyrinthodonts, found in the European Triassic rocks.

megalosaurusnoun (n.) A gigantic carnivorous dinosaur, whose fossil remains have been found in England and elsewhere.

merusnoun (n.) See Meros.

morosaurusnoun (n.) An extinct genus of large herbivorous dinosaurs, found in Jurassic strata in America.

mosasaurusnoun (n.) A genus of extinct marine reptiles allied to the lizards, but having the body much elongated, and the limbs in the form of paddles. The first known species, nearly fifty feet in length, was discovered in Cretaceous beds near Maestricht, in the Netherlands.

mososaurusnoun (n.) Same as Mosasaurus.

oestrusnoun (n.) A genus of gadflies. The species which deposits its larvae in the nasal cavities of sheep is oestrus ovis.
 noun (n.) A vehement desire; esp. (Physiol.), the periodical sexual impulse of animals; heat; rut.

paleosaurusnoun (n.) A genus of fossil saurians found in the Permian formation.

palinurusnoun (n.) An instrument for obtaining directly, without calculation, the true bearing of the sun, and thence the variation of the compass

papyrusnoun (n.) A tall rushlike plant (Cyperus Papyrus) of the Sedge family, formerly growing in Egypt, and now found in Abyssinia, Syria, Sicily, etc. The stem is triangular and about an inch thick.
 noun (n.) The material upon which the ancient Egyptians wrote. It was formed by cutting the stem of the plant into thin longitudinal slices, which were gummed together and pressed.
 noun (n.) A manuscript written on papyrus; esp., pl., written scrolls made of papyrus; as, the papyri of Egypt or Herculaneum.

pentamerusnoun (n.) A genus of extinct Paleozoic brachiopods, often very abundant in the Upper Silurian.

phoenicopterusnoun (n.) A genus of birds which includes the flamingoes.

pleiosaurusnoun (n.) Same as Pliosaurus.

plesiosaurusnoun (n.) A genus of large extinct marine reptiles, having a very long neck, a small head, and paddles for swimming. It lived in the Mesozoic age.

pliosaurusnoun (n.) An extinct genus of marine reptiles allied to Plesiosaurus, but having a much shorter neck.

polypterusnoun (n.) An African genus of ganoid fishes including the bichir.

proterosaurusnoun (n.) An extinct genus of reptiles of the Permian period. Called also Protosaurus.

protopterusnoun (n.) See Komtok.

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


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


florulentadjective (a.) Flowery; blossoming.


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.

floriagenoun (n.) Bloom; blossom.

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

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.

floroonnoun (n.) A border worked with flowers.

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


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 FLORUS:

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

flagitiousadjective (a.) Disgracefully or shamefully criminal; grossly wicked; scandalous; shameful; -- said of acts, crimes, etc.
 adjective (a.) Guilty of enormous crimes; corrupt; profligate; -- said of persons.
 adjective (a.) Characterized by scandalous crimes or vices; as, flagitious times.

flamineousadjective (a.) Pertaining to a flamen; flaminical.

flammeousadjective (a.) Pertaining to, consisting of, or resembling, flame.

flammiferousadjective (a.) Producing flame.

flammivomousadjective (a.) Vomiting flames, as a volcano.

flatuousadjective (a.) Windy; generating wind.

flatusnoun (n.) A breath; a puff of wind.
 noun (n.) Wind or gas generated in the stomach or other cavities of the body.
  (pl. ) of Flatus

flavicomousadjective (a.) Having yellow hair.

flavorousadjective (a.) Imparting flavor; pleasant to the taste or smell; sapid.

flavousadjective (a.) Yellow.

fletiferousadjective (a.) Producing tears.

flexanimousadjective (a.) Having power to change the mind.

flexuousadjective (a.) Having turns, windings, or flexures.
 adjective (a.) Having alternate curvatures in opposite directions; bent in a zigzag manner.
 adjective (a.) Wavering; not steady; flickering.

fluctiferousadjective (a.) Tending to produce waves.

fluctisonousadjective (a.) Sounding like waves.

fluminousadjective (a.) Pertaining to rivers; abounding in streama.

fluorousadjective (a.) Pertaining to fluor.