List Words
Rhyming
of Rhyme
Culm
The stalk or stem of grain and grasses (including the bamboo), jointed and usually hollow.
Dun
A mound or small hill.
Murmurer
One who murmurs.
Freightage
Charge for transportation; expense of carriage.
Iron-gray
Of a gray color, somewhat resembling that of iron freshly broken.
Offal
The rejected or waste parts of a butchered animal.
Sweepings
Things collected by sweeping; rubbish; as, the sweepings of a street.
Camerated
of Camerate
Gubernatorial
Pertaining to a governor, or to government.
Sallow
The willow; willow twigs.
Incompetency
The quality or state of being incompetent; want of physical, intellectual, or moral ability; insufficiency; inadequacy; as, the incompetency of a child hard labor, or of an idiot for intellec..
Farrier
A shoer of horses; a veterinary surgeon.
Swig
A tackle with ropes which are not parallel.
Chancel
That part of a church, reserved for the use of the clergy, where the altar, or communion table, is placed.
Breeder
One who, or that which, breeds, produces, brings up, etc.
Coverlet
The uppermost cover of a bed or of any piece of furniture.
Conveyancing
The business of a conveyancer; the act or business of drawing deeds, leases, or other writings, for transferring the title to property from one person to another.
Delegation
The act of delegating, or investing with authority to act for another; the appointment of a delegate or delegates.
Triforium
The gallery or open space between the vaulting and the roof of the aisles of a church, often forming a rich arcade in the interior of the church, above the nave arches and below the clearstory ..
Persecution
The act or practice of persecuting; especially, the infliction of loss, pain, or death for adherence to a particular creed or mode of worship.
Siliquose
Alt. of Siliquous
Silvered
of Silver
Mesalliance
A marriage with a person of inferior social position; a misalliance.
Grievance
A cause of uneasiness and complaint; a wrong done and suffered; that which gives ground for remonstrance or resistance, as arising from injustice, tyranny, etc.; injury.
Obduce
To draw over, as a covering.
Exequatur
A written official recognition of a consul or commercial agent, issued by the government to which he is accredited, and authorizing him to exercise his powers in the place to which he is assi..
Unwashed
Not washed or cleansed; filthy; unclean.
Differ
To be or stand apart; to disagree; to be unlike; to be distinguished; -- with from.
Tyranny
The government or authority of a tyrant; a country governed by an absolute ruler; hence, arbitrary or despotic exercise of power; exercise of power over subjects and others with a rigor not a..
Outspread
To spread out; to expand; -- usually as a past part. / adj.
Disband
To loose the bands of; to set free; to disunite; to scatter; to disperse; to break up the organization of; especially, to dismiss from military service; as, to disband an army.
Rhombic
Shaped like a rhomb.
Damoiselle
See Damsel.
Ecclesiastic
Of or pertaining to the church. See Ecclesiastical.
Prevent
To go before; to precede; hence, to go before as a guide; to direct.
Grazier
One who pastures cattle, and rears them for market.
Digress
To step or turn aside; to deviate; to swerve; especially, to turn aside from the main subject of attention, or course of argument, in writing or speaking.
Preferred
of Prefer
Mare
The female of the horse and other equine quadrupeds.
Raff
To sweep, snatch, draw, or huddle together; to take by a promiscuous sweep.
Separatrix
The decimal point; the dot placed at the left of a decimal fraction, to separate it from the whole number which it follows. The term is sometimes also applied to other marks of separation.
Retrograde
Apparently moving backward, and contrary to the succession of the signs, that is, from east to west, as a planet.
Cleric
A clerk, a clergyman.
Puisne
Later in age, time, etc.; subsequent.
Sewage
The contents of a sewer or drain; refuse liquids or matter carried off by sewers
Monarchial
Monarchic.
Cumbrance
Encumbrance.
Transept
The transversal part of a church, which crosses at right angles to the greatest length, and between the nave and choir. In the basilicas, this had often no projection at its two ends. In Gothic ..
Revivalist
A clergyman or layman who promotes revivals of religion; an advocate for religious revivals; sometimes, specifically, a clergyman, without a particular charge, who goes about to promote reviv..