Matching Words
33398 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
Jatrophic
- - Of or pertaining to physic nuts, the seeds of plants of the genus Jatropha.
Jaun Gris
- noun - Spanish cubist painter (1887-1927)
Jaundiced
- verb - affect with, or as if with, jaundice
- affected by jaundice which causes yellowing of skin etc
- distort adversely; "Jealousy had jaundiced his judgment"
- showing or affected by prejudice or envy or distaste; "looked with a jaundiced eye on the growth of regimentation"; "takes a jaundiced view of societies and clubs"
Jaundices
- noun - a rough and bitter manner
- affect with, or as if with, jaundice
- distort adversely; "Jealousy had jaundiced his judgment"
- yellowing of the skin and the whites of the eyes caused by an accumulation of bile pigment (bilirubin) in the blood; can be a symptom of gallstones or liver infection or anemia
Jauntiest
- adjective - having a cheerful, lively, and self-confident air; "looking chipper, like a man...diverted by his own wit"- Frances G. Patton; "life that is gay, brisk, and debonair"- H.M.Reynolds; "walked with a jaunty step"; "a jaunty optimist"
- marked by up-to-dateness in dress and manners; "a dapper young man"; "a jaunty red hat"
Javelinas
- noun - dark grey peccary with an indistinct white collar; of semi desert areas of Mexico and southwestern United States
Jawboning
- verb - talk idly or casually and in a friendly way
Jawfishes
- noun - small large-mouthed tropical marine fishes common along sandy bottoms; males brood egg balls in their mouths; popular aquarium fishes
Jay Cooke
- noun - United States financier who marketed Union bonds to finance the American Civil War; the failure of his bank resulted in a financial panic in 1873 (1821-1905)
- United States financier who marketed Union bonds to finance the Civil War; the failure of his bank resulted in a financial panic in 1873 (1821-1905)
Jay Gould
- noun - United States financier who gained control of the Erie Canal and who caused a financial panic in 1869 when he attempted to corner the gold market (1836-1892)