| ASSONANCE | • assonance n. (Prosody) The repetition of similar or identical vowel sounds (though with different consonants), usually… • ASSONANCE n. vowel-rhyme, coincidence of vowel sound without regard to consonants. |
| ASSONANTS | • ASSONANT n. a word or syllable that resembles another in sound. |
| ASSONATED | • assonated v. Simple past tense and past participle of assonate. • ASSONATE v. to match in a vowel sound. |
| ASSONATES | • assonates v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of assonate. • ASSONATE v. to match in a vowel sound. |
| BISSONING | • BISSON v. (Shakespeare) to cause to be blind. |
| CASSONADE | • cassonade n. Raw unrefined sugar. • CASSONADE n. (French) unrefined cane-sugar (imported in casks). |
| CAVESSONS | • cavessons n. Plural of cavesson. • CAVESSON n. (French) a noseband for a horse. |
| DISSONANT | • dissonant adj. Exhibiting dissonance; not agreeing or harmonizing. • DISSONANT adj. discordant, inharmonious. |
| ESSONITES | • essonites n. Plural of essonite. • ESSONITE n. cinnamon stone, a variety of garnet, also HESSONITE. |
| HERISSONS | • herissons n. Plural of herisson. • HERISSON n. (French) a pivoted beam with iron spikes, protecting wall, passage, etc. |
| HESSONITE | • hessonite n. An orange, cinnamon, or pinkish garnet. • HESSONITE n. cinnamon stone, a variety of garnet, also ESSONITE. |
| LESSONING | • lessoning v. Present participle of lesson. • lessoning n. (Archaic) instruction; tuition. • LESSONING n. the act of teaching a lesson to. |
| LEWISSONS | • lewissons n. Plural of lewisson. • LEWISSON n. a dovetailed iron tenon made to fit into a stone so that it can be hoisted, also LEWIS. |
| OGANESSON | • oganesson n. The chemical element (Symbol Og) with atomic number 118. It is the heaviest known element. Highly radioactive… • OGANESSON n. a highly radioactive element, of which only a few atoms have ever been produced. |
| SAUCISSON | • saucisson n. A saucisse. • SAUCISSON n. (French) a long canvas tube filled with powder for use as a fuse, e.g. when firing a mine, also SAUCISSE. |