What is the meaning of RY. Phrases containing RY
See meanings and uses of RY!RY
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Acronyms & AI meanings
Army-Navy Staff College
Cocaine User
Located in Lee County
Infocarto Remote Sensing
Big Friendly Giant
: World Wide Operations
: Client Representative for Business Partners
Foreign Agricultural Resource Management Service
Retrograde Pyelogram
Oregon Environmental Engineering
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a.
Eating, or subsisting on, filth.
n.
A branch.
n.
A disease in a hawk.
n.
A ford.
n.
A piece of iron crossing the hole in the upper millstone by which the stone is supported on the spindle.
n.
A gold coin of Zealand [Netherlands] equal to 14 florins, about $ 5.60.
n.
A grain yielded by a hardy cereal grass (Secale cereale), closely allied to wheat; also, the plant itself. Rye constitutes a large portion of the breadstuff used by man.
n.
A peasant or cultivator of the soil.
n.
A clause added to a document; a rider. See Rider.
v. i.
To put forth new shoots from the root, or round the bottom of the original stalk; as, wheat or rye tillers; some spread plants by tillering.
n.
See Rhysimeter.
n.
An intoxicating liquor distilled from grain, potatoes, etc., especially in Scotland, Ireland, and the United States. In the United States, whisky is generally distilled from maize, rye, or wheat, but in Scotland and Ireland it is often made from malted barley.
n.
Rush, a plant.
n.
A Russian drink distilled from rye.
n.
See Rye.
v. t.
To beat out grain from, as straw or husks; to beat the straw or husk of (grain) with a flail; to beat off, as the kernels of grain; as, to thrash wheat, rye, or oats; to thrash over the old straw.
a.
Pertaining to, or designating, an acid obtained from ergot or the sclerotium of a fungus growing on rye.
a.
Royal.
n.
See Rial, an old English coin.
n.
A genus of large edentulous sirenians, allied to the dugong and manatee, including but one species (R. Stelleri); -- called also Steller's sea cow. S () the nineteenth letter of the English alphabet, is a consonant, and is often called a sibilant, in allusion to its hissing sound. It has two principal sounds; one a mere hissing, as in sack, this; the other a vocal hissing (the same as that of z), as in is, wise. Besides these it sometimes has the sounds of sh and zh, as in sure, measure. It generally has its hissing sound at the beginning of words, but in the middle and at the end of words its sound is determined by usage. In a few words it is silent, as in isle, debris. With the letter h it forms the digraph sh. See Guide to pronunciation, // 255-261.
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