Home
3D
Stylish English
Comic Cartoon
Curly
Decorative
Dingbats
Dotted
Famous
Fire
Gothic
Groovy
Handwriting
Headline
more
Horror
Ice Snow
Modern
Outline
Russian
Sci Fi
Script
Valentine
Alien
Animals
Army Stencil
Asian
Bitmap Pixel
Black Letter
Blurred
Brush
Celtic Irish
Chalk Crayon
Christmas
Computer
Disney
Distorted
Easter
Fantasy
Fixed Width
Graffiti
Greek Roman
Halloween
Italic
LCD
Medieval
Mexican
Movies Tv
Old English
Old School
Pointed
Retro
Rock Stone
Rounded
School
Scratched
Serif
Square
Trash
Typewriter
USA
Various
Western
English to English Dictionary ⇛
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Definition of rode
Thanks for using this online dictionary, we have been helping millions of people improve their use of the english language with its free online services. English definition of rode is as below...
Rode
(imp.)
of Rid.
Lern More About Rode
☛ Wiki Definition of Rode
☛ Wiki Article of Rode
☛ Google Meaning of Rode
☛ Google Search for Rode
Saurobatrachia
::
Saurobatrachia
(n. pl.) The
Urodela.
Gnaw
::
Gnaw (v. t.) To
corrode;
to fret away; to
waste.
Scrode
::
Scrode
(n.) A young
codfish,
especially
when cut open on the back and
dressed..
Lagemorpha
::
Lagemorpha
(n. pl.) A group of
rodents,
including
the
hares.
They have four
incisors
in the upper jaw.
Called
also
Duplicidentata..
Acrimony
::
Acrimony
(n.) A
quality
of
bodies
which
corrodes
or
destroys
others;
also, a harsh or
biting
sharpness;
as, the
acrimony
of the
juices
of
certain
plants..
Geissler Tube
::
Geissler
tube () A glass tube
provided
with
platinum
electrodes,
and
containing
some gas under very low
tension,
which
becomes
luminous
when an
electrical
discharge
is
passed
through
it; -- so
called
from the name of a noted maker in
germany.
It is
called
also
Plucker
tube, from the
German
physicist
who
devised
it..
Muskrat
::
Muskrat
(n.) A North
American
aquatic
fur-bearing
rodent
(Fiber
zibethicus).
It
resembles
a rat in color and
having
a long scaly tail, but the tail is
compressed,
the bind feet are
webbed,
and the ears are
concealed
in the fur. It has scent
glands
which
secrete
a
substance
having
a
strong
odor of musk.
Called
also
musquash,
musk
beaver,
and
ondatra..
Arthroderm
::
Arthroderm
(n.) The
external
covering
of an
Arthropod.
Rodentia
::
Rodentia
(a.) An order of
mammals
having
two
(rarely
four) large
incisor
teeth in each jaw,
distant
from the molar
teeth.
The rats,
squirrels,
rabbits,
marmots,
and
beavers
belong
to this
order..
Xeroderma
::
Xeroderma
(n.) A skin
disease
characterized
by the
presence
of
numerous
small
pigmented
spots
resembling
freckles,
with which are
subsequently
mingled
spots of
atrophied
skin..
Pouch
::
Pouch (n.) A sac or bag for
carrying
food or
young;
as, the cheek
pouches
of
certain
rodents,
and the pouch of
marsupials..
Castor
::
Castor
(n.) A genus of
rodents,
including
the
beaver.
See
Beaver..
Myomorpha
::
Myomorpha
(n. pl.) An
extensive
group of
rodents
which
includes
the rats, mice,
jerboas,
and many
allied
forms..
Schrode
::
Schrode
(n.) See
Scrod.
Tillodontia
::
Tillodontia
(n. pl.) An
extinct
group of
Mammalia
found
fossil
in the
Eocene
formation.
The
species
are
related
to the
carnivores,
ungulates,
and
rodents.
Called
also
Tillodonta..
Sigmodont
::
Sigmodont
(n.) Any one of a tribe
(Sigmodontes)
of
rodents
which
includes
all the
indigenous
rats and mice of
America.
So
called
from the form of the
ridges
of
enamel
on the
crowns
of the worn
molars.
Also used
adjectively.
Chincha
::
Chincha
(n.) A south
American
rodent
of the genus
Lagotis.
Voltagraphy
::
Voltagraphy
(n.) In
electrotypy,
the act or art of
copying,
in
metals
deposited
by
electrolytic
action,
a form or
pattern
which is made the
negative
electrode..
Gerbille
::
Gerbille
(n.) One of
several
species
of
small,
jumping,
murine
rodents,
of the genus
Gerbillus.
In their
leaping
powers
they
resemble
the
jerboa.
They
inhabit
Africa,
India,
and
Southern
Europe..
Bad Lands
::
Bad lands ()
Barren
regions,
especially
in the
western
United
States,
where
horizontal
strata
(Tertiary
deposits)
have been often
eroded
into
fantastic
forms,
and much
intersected
by
ca–ons,
and where lack of wood,
water,
and
forage
increases
the
difficulty
of
traversing
the
country,
whence
the name, first given by the
Canadian
French,
Mauvaises
Terres
(bad
lands)..
Random Fonts
Most Popular
Privacy Policy
GDPR Policy
Terms & Conditions
Contact Us