What is the name meaning of RICE. Phrases containing RICE
See name meanings and uses of RICE!RICE
RICE
Boy/Male
Welsh American Anglo Saxon
Ardent.
Surname or Lastname
French
French : habitational name from any of several places named Dury, in Aisne, Pas-de-Calais, and Somme.French and Swiss German : topographic name for someone who lived by a stream, du ry ‘from the stream’. Because ry has fallen out of use, the name has been translated as Rice, the French word for ‘rice’, riz, being a homophone.English : either a habitational name from Dury in Lydford, Devon, or of French origin (see 1), the surname having been taken to England by the Huguenots.
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Rice
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Marathi, Sanskrit
Rice
Boy/Male
Tamil
One who cannot be injured, Rice offered to deity in Hindu Pooja, Indestructible
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Indian
One Kind of Rice Grain
Girl/Female
Tamil
Rice, Immortal, Unscathed, Perfect, Untouched i.e. divinity
Girl/Female
Tamil
First Ray of Sun, Heavenly, Rice, Queen
Girl/Female
Tamil
First Ray of Sun, Heavenly, Rice, Queen
Boy/Male
Indian
One who cannot be injured, Rice offered to deity in Hindu Pooja, Indestructible
Boy/Male
Tamil
One who cannot be injured, Rice offered to deity in Hindu Pooja, Indestructible
Boy/Male
Indian
One who cannot be injured, Rice offered to deity in Hindu Pooja, Indestructible
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Tamil, Telugu
Sun Rice
Girl/Female
Indian
First Ray of Sun, Heavenly, Rice, Queen
Girl/Female
Indian
First Ray of Sun, Heavenly, Rice, Queen
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Tamil, Telugu
Good; Gold Rice
Girl/Female
Indian
Rice, Immortal, Unscathed, Perfect, Untouched i.e. divinity
Girl/Female
Indian
Rice, Immortal, Unscathed, Perfect, Untouched i.e. divinity
Surname or Lastname
English and German
English and German : from Ida, which is found as both a male and female personal name in English but only as a female name in German. This is of continental Germanic origin and was popular among the Normans, who brought it to England. Its etymology is disputed: it is thought by some to be of the same origin as hild- ‘battle’, ‘strife’; by others to be of the same origin as Old High German idis ‘(wise) woman’, or from Old Norse idh ‘work’, ‘activity’.Japanese : ‘rice paddy by the well’; habitational name from Ida-mura in Musashi (now TÅkyÅ and Saitama prefectures). Variously written and found mostly in eastern Japan and the RyÅ«kyÅ« Islands.
Girl/Female
Tamil
Rice, Immortal, Unscathed, Perfect, Untouched i.e. divinity
RICE
RICE
Girl/Female
German, Polish
Ruler of an Enclosure; Home Ruler; Female Version of Henry
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Malayalam, Marathi
One
Boy/Male
British, English
Meadow of Quivering Aspens
Girl/Female
Arabic
Doctor
Girl/Female
Muslim
Rachel.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Elevated, Eminent
Girl/Female
Tamil
Friendly
Boy/Male
Teutonic
Famous in war.
Boy/Male
American, Anglo, Arabic, Australian, Bengali, British, Chinese, Christian, Czechoslovakian, Danish, Dutch, English, French, German, Irish, Italian, Jamaican, Netherlands, Swedish, Swiss, Teutonic
Brave One; Strong Ruler; A Teutonic Name from the European Middle Ages; Dominant Ruler; Powerful Leader
Girl/Female
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
Family Person
RICE
RICE
RICE
RICE
RICE
n.
The alcoholic drink of Japan. It is made from rice.
n.
A genus of grasses including Indian rice. See Indian rice, under Rice.
n.
An Oriental dish consisting of rice boiled with mutton, fat, or butter.
n.
A cereal grass (Triticum vulgare) and its grain, which furnishes a white flour for bread, and, next to rice, is the grain most largely used by the human race.
n.
A cask larger than a barrel, and smaller than a hogshead or a puncheon, in which salt provisions, rice, etc., are packed for shipment.
n.
Any one of numerous species of small white polished marine shells of the genus Olivella.
n.
Any one of several species of small insectivores of the family Centetidae, belonging to Ericulus, Echinope, and related genera, native of Madagascar. They are more or less spinose and resemble the hedgehog in habits. The rice tendrac (Oryzorictes hora) is very injurious to rice crops. Some of the species are called also tenrec.
n.
The husks and other refuse of rice mills, used to adulterate oil cake, or linseed cake.
n.
A widely diffused vegetable substance found especially in seeds, bulbs, and tubers, and extracted (as from potatoes, corn, rice, etc.) as a white, glistening, granular or powdery substance, without taste or smell, and giving a very peculiar creaking sound when rubbed between the fingers. It is used as a food, in the production of commercial grape sugar, for stiffening linen in laundries, in making paste, etc.
n.
Any one of numerous species of snout beetles, or Rhynchophora, in which the head is elongated and usually curved downward. Many of the species are very injurious to cultivated plants. The larvae of some of the species live in nuts, fruit, and grain by eating out the interior, as the plum weevil, or curculio, the nut weevils, and the grain weevil (see under Plum, Nut, and Grain). The larvae of other species bore under the bark and into the pith of trees and various other plants, as the pine weevils (see under Pine). See also Pea weevil, Rice weevil, Seed weevil, under Pea, Rice, and Seed.
n.
The Java sparrow.
n.
The bobolink.
n.
A kind of package in which pepper and other dry commodities are sometimes exported from the East Indies. The robbin of rice in Malabar weighs about 84 pounds.
n.
A genus of grasses including the rice plant; rice.
n.
A spirituous liquor distilled by the Chinese from the yeasty liquor in which boiled rice has fermented under pressure.
n.
Unhusked rice; -- commonly so called in the East Indies.
a.
Of or pertaining to the grasses which are cultivated for their edible seeds (as wheat, maize, rice, etc.), or to their seeds or grain.
n.
A well-known cereal grass (Oryza sativa) and its seed. This plant is extensively cultivated in warm climates, and the grain forms a large portion of the food of the inhabitants. In America it grows chiefly on low, moist land, which can be overflowed.