Matching Words
109 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
Music
- noun - (music) the sounds produced by singers or musical instruments (or reproductions of such sounds)
- an artistic form of auditory communication incorporating instrumental or vocal tones in a structured and continuous manner
- any agreeable (pleasing and harmonious) sounds; "he fell asleep to the music of the wind chimes"
- musical activity (singing or whistling etc.); "his music was his central interest"
- punishment for one's actions; "you have to face the music"; "take your medicine"
Nomic
- - Customary; ordinary; -- applied to the usual English spelling, in distinction from strictly phonetic methods. H Sweet. -- n. Nomic spelling.
Octic
- - Of the eighth degree or order. -- n. (Alg.) A quantic of the eighth degree.
Ohmic
- adjective - of or relating to or measured in ohms
Oleic
- - Pertaining to, derived from, or contained in, oil; as, oleic acid, an acid of the acrylic acid series found combined with glyceryl in the form of olein in certain animal and vegetable fats and oils, such as sperm oil, olive oil, etc. At low temperatures the acid is crystalline, but melts to an oily liquid above 14
Optic
- adjective - measure of alcholic spirit
- of or relating to or resembling the eye; "ocular muscles"; "an ocular organ"; "ocular diseases"; "the optic (or optical) axis of the eye"; "an ocular spot is a pigmented organ or part believed to be sensitive to light"
- relating to or using sight; "ocular inspection"; "an optical illusion"; "visual powers"; "visual navigation"
- the organ of sight
Osmic
- - Pertaining to, derived from, or containing, osmium; specifically, designating those compounds in which it has a valence higher than in other lower compounds; as, osmic oxide.
Osric
- unknown - An Anglo Saxon king of Northumbria in the 720s AD
Ostic
- - Pertaining to, or applied to, the language of the Tuscaroras, Iroquois, Wyandots, Winnebagoes, and a part of the Sioux Indians.
Panic
- noun - an overwhelming feeling of fear and anxiety
- be overcome by a sudden fear; "The students panicked when told that final exams were less than a week away"
- cause sudden fear in or fill with sudden panic; "The mere thought of an isolation cell panicked the prisoners"
- sudden mass fear and anxiety over anticipated events; "panic in the stock market"; "a war scare"; "a bomb scare led them to evacuate the building"