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Rhymes for "march" — perfect and near rhymes for songwriters, poets, and lyricists looking for the right ending sound.
(v)
(transitive) To dry to extremity; to shrivel with heat.
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(n)
(architecture) A kind of four-centred arch with partially straight rather than curved sides, developed in Fatimid architecture.
A very fine starch powder derived from corn (maize) used in cooking as a thickener, to keep things from sticking, or as an anti-caking agent.
(anatomy) The arch of a vertebra protecting the spinal cord.
branchial arch
(architecture) A sharp pointed arch used in doors and windows, etc. This type of architecture was peculiar to England in the 13th century.
Alternative spelling of démarche. [A diplomatic maneuver; one handled with finesse.]
an arch constructed at an angle other than a right angle
A monumental arch that commemorates a victory.
one form in which body fuel is stored; stored primarily in the liver and broken down into glucose when needed by the body
an arch with mutually supporting voussoirs that has a straight horizontal extrados and intrados
The pelvis.
(N)
A pointed arch, ogival arch, or Gothic arch is an arch with a pointed crown meet at an angle at the top of the arch.
An arch of unusual form, following the curve of an ogee.
the part of the upper or lower jawbones in which the teeth are set
(architecture) An arch whose intrados, though apparently straight, has a slightly concave curve upward.
A form of arch in which the intrados is straight, but with its joints drawn radially.
a blunt pointed arch drawn from two centers within the span
(usually in the plural) An instance of flat feet that results from the arch of the foot collapsing.
Any conifer of the genus Pseudolarix, which are not true larches (Larix).
(archaic) pectoral girdle
(architecture) An arch built in the body of a wall to relieve the pressure, as over a door or window.
an arch built between trimmers in a floor (to support the weight of a hearth)
medium-sized larch of canada and northern united states including alaska having a broad conic crown and rust-brown scaly bark
an arch supported on piers
An arch less than a semicircle.
an arch with a gap at the apex; the gap is usually filled with some decoration
an arch whose support is higher on one side than on the other
an arch consisting of a horizontal lintel supported at each end by corbels that project into the aperture
an arch whose height is less than half its width
a conical squinch
In architecture, a semicircular arch is an arch with an intrados (inner surface) shaped like a semicircle.
an instep flattened so the entire sole rests on the ground
(architecture) An architectural element having the shape of an arch
A surname.
A deciduous conifer native to central Europe but also cultivated in England and elsewhere, Larix decidua.
(architecture) An arch in the shape of ogive.
A surname from Polish.
(countable) A coniferous tree, of genus Larix, having deciduous leaves, in fascicles.
Synonym of horseshoe arch.
tall larch of western north america have pale green sharply pointed leaves and oblong cones; an important timber tree
a round arch drawn from a single center
an arch formed in a continuous curve
The tree Larix sibirica.
(architecture) A kind of flattened four-centred arch found in English architecture.