Matching Words
2252 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
Roc
- noun - mythical bird of prey having enormous size and strength
Rod
- noun - a gangster's pistol
- a linear measure of 16.5 feet
- a long thin implement made of metal or wood
- a square rod of land
- a visual receptor cell that is sensitive to dim light
- any rod-shaped bacterium
Roe
- noun - eggs of female fish
- fish eggs or egg-filled ovary; having a grainy texture
- Large deer
- the egg mass or spawn of certain crustaceans such as the lobster
- the eggs or egg-laden ovary of a fish
ROI
- noun - (corporate finance) the amount, expressed as a percentage, that is earned on a company's total capital calculated by dividing the total capital into earnings before interest, taxes, or dividends are paid
ROM
- noun - (computer science) memory whose contents can be accessed and read but cannot be changed
Ron
- noun - a Chadic language spoken in northern Nigeria
Roo
- unknown - slang or shortened term for an Australian Kangaroo.
Rot
- noun - (biology) the process of decay caused by bacterial or fungal action
- a state of decay usually accompanied by an offensive odor
- become physically weaker; "Political prisoners are wasting away in many prisons all over the world"
- break down; "The bodies decomposed in the heat"
- unacceptable behavior (especially ludicrously false statements)
Row
- noun - (construction) a layer of masonry; "a course of bricks"
- a continuous chronological succession without an interruption; "they won the championship three years in a row"
- a linear array of numbers, letters, or symbols side by side
- a long continuous strip (usually running horizontally); "a mackerel sky filled with rows of clouds"; "rows of barbed wire protected the trenches"
- an angry dispute; "they had a quarrel"; "they had words"
- an arrangement of objects or people side by side in a line; "a row of chairs"
- Created a noisy squabble
- propel with oars; "row the boat across the lake"
- the act of rowing as a sport
Roy
- - A king.
- Suzanna Arundhati Roy (born 24 November 1961) is an Indian author best known for her novel The God of Small Things (1997), which won the Man Booker Prize for Fiction in 1997 and became the best-selling book by a non-expatriate Indian author.