Definitions Found:
Relating to or marked by alliteration
- alliterativeRelating to or marked by alliteration
- alliterativeof, relating to, or marked by alliteration
- alliterativelyALLITERATIVE, of, relating to, or marked by alliteration
- eosinophilicRelating to or marked by eosinophilia
- passionalOf, relating to, or marked by passion
- extensionalof, relating to, or marked by extension
- autonomousof, relating to, or marked by autonomy
- exterminatoryof, relating to, or marked by extermination
- extensionallyEXTENSIONAL, of, relating to, or marked by extension
- regressiveOf, relating to, or marked by psychological regression
- autonomouslyAUTONOMOUS, of, relating to, or marked by autonomy
- anticlimacticof, relating to, or marked by anticlimax also ANTICLIMACTICAL
- anticlimacticalof, relating to, or marked by anticlimax also ANTICLIMACTIC
- consonantalrelating to, being, or marked by a consonant or group of consonants
- consonantallyCONSONANTAL, relating to, being, or marked by a consonant or group of consonants
- vulcanianRelating to or denoting a type of volcanic eruption marked by periodic explosive events
- tuberculoidRelating to or denoting the milder of the two principal forms of leprosy, marked by few, well-defined lesions similar to those of tuberculosis, often with loss of feeling in the affected areas
- lepromatousRelating to or denoting the more severe of the two principal forms of leprosy, marked by thickening of the skin and nerves, the formation of lumps on the skin, and often severe loss of feeling and paralysis leading to disfigurement
- euphuismaffected style in imitation of that of Lyly, fashionable in England about the end of the 16th century, characterized chiefly by long series of antitheses and frequent similes relating to mythological natural history, and alliteration
- euphuistsaffected style in imitation of that of Lyly, fashionable in England about the end of the 16th century, characterized chiefly by long series of antitheses and frequent similes relating to mythological natural history, and alliteration
- euphuistaffected style in imitation of that of Lyly, fashionable in England about the end of the 16th century, characterized chiefly by long series of antitheses and frequent similes relating to mythological natural history, and alliteration