What is the name meaning of CHITI. Phrases containing CHITI
See name meanings and uses of CHITI!CHITI
CHITI
Girl/Female
Indian
Love
Girl/Female
Bengali, Hindu, Indian, Jain, Kannada, Marathi, Telugu
Little; Love
Girl/Female
Tamil
Love
CHITI
CHITI
Girl/Female
Scandinavian
Abbreviation of Katherine. Pure.
Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi
Child's Plaything
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian
Melody with Healing Touch
Boy/Male
Hindu
Looks like Ishwar, The supreme God of Hindu, Lord of beauty
Surname or Lastname
English (of Norman origin)
English (of Norman origin) : nickname denoting someone who behaved in a regal fashion or who had earned the title in some contest of skill or by presiding over festivities, from Old French rey, roy ‘king’. Occasionally this was used as a personal name.English : nickname for a timid person, from Middle English ray ‘female roe deer’ or northern Middle English ray ‘roebuck’.English : variant of Rye (1 and 2).English : habitational name, a variant spelling of Wray.Scottish : reduced and altered form of McRae.French : from a noun derivative of Old French raier ‘to gush, stream, or pour’, hence a topographic name for someone who lived near a spring or rushing stream, or a habitational name from a place called Ray.Indian : variant of Rai.
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Thunder
Boy/Male
English
Noble or famous.
Boy/Male
Arabic, Muslim, Zoroastrian
Paradise Flower
Boy/Male
Tamil
Adeshwar | ஆதேஷà¯à®µà®°Â
God
Girl/Female
French Irish
Tiny and womanly.
CHITI
CHITI
CHITI
CHITI
CHITI
n.
A special structure found in the mouth of most mollusks, except bivalves. It consists of several muscles and a cartilage which supports a chitinous radula, or lingual ribbon, armed with teeth. Also applied to the radula alone. See Radula.
n.
The chitinous fiber forming the spiral thread of the tracheae of insects. See Illust. of Trachea.
n.
Any species or marine hydroids, of the genus Hydractinia and allied genera. These hydroids form, by their rootstalks, a firm, chitinous coating on shells and stones, and esp. on spiral shells occupied by hermit crabs. See Illust. of Athecata.
n.
One of the movable chitinous spines or hooks of an annelid. They usually arise in clusters from muscular capsules, and are used in locomotion and for defense. They are very diverse in form.
n.
One of the cells which secrete the chitinous teeth of Mollusca.
a.
Covered with a hard chitinous case, as the pupa of certain files.
n.
An inner cellular layer which lies beneath the chitinous cuticle of arthropods, annelids, and some other invertebrates.
n.
Any species of Sertularia, or of Sertularidae, a family of hydroids having branched chitinous stems and simple sessile hydrothecae. Also used adjectively.
n.
One of the two pairs of upper thoracic appendages of most hexapod insects. They are broad, fanlike organs formed of a double membrane and strengthened by chitinous veins or nervures.
n.
The hard calcareous or chitinous external covering of mollusks, crustaceans, and some other invertebrates. In some mollusks, as the cuttlefishes, it is internal, or concealed by the mantle. Also, the hard covering of some vertebrates, as the armadillo, the tortoise, and the like.
n.
Any hydroid which has tubular chitinous stems.
n. pl.
An extensive order of parasitic worms. They are found in the internal cavities of animals belonging to all classes. Many species are found, also, on the gills and skin of fishes. A few species are parasitic on man, and some, of which the fluke is the most important, are injurious parasites of domestic animals. The trematodes usually have a flattened body covered with a chitinous skin, and are furnished with two or more suckers for adhesion. Most of the species are hermaphrodite. Called also Trematoda, and Trematoidea. See Fluke, Tristoma, and Cercaria.
n.
A hard chitinous or calcareous process or corpuscle, especially a spicule of the Alcyonaria.
n.
One of the chitinous supports, or veins, in the wings of incests.
a.
Having the nature of chitin; consisting of, or containing, chitin.
n.
Any hard calcareous or chitinous organ found in the mouth of various invertebrates and used in feeding or procuring food; as, the teeth of a mollusk or a starfish.
n.
The chitinous cup which protects the hydranths of certain hydroids.
n.
One of the peculiar minute chitinous hooks found in large numbers in the tori of tubicolous annelids belonging to the Uncinata.
n.
The process of becoming chitinous.