- thral
- ar·thral;ar·thral·gia;clei·thral;hy·pae·thral;po·dar·thral;en·thral;en·thral·ment;thral·dom;ure·thral;xe·nar·thral;
English syllables. 2014.
English syllables. 2014.
thral|dom — thrall|dom or thral|dom «THRL duhm», noun. bondage; slavery; servitude: »A sorcerer had the knight in thralldom … Useful english dictionary
ar|thral|gia — «ahr THRAL juh», noun. pain, especially neuralgic pain, in a joint. ╂[< Greek árthron joint + álgos pain] … Useful english dictionary
ar|thral|gic — «ahr THRAL jihk», adjective. of or affected with arthralgia … Useful english dictionary
bul|bo|u|re|thral glands — «BUHL boh yu REE thruhl», = Cowper s glands. (Cf. ↑Cowper s glands) … Useful english dictionary
dis|en|thral|ment — dis|en|thrall|ment or dis|en|thral|ment «DIHS ehn THRL muhnt», noun. a freeing or a being freed from enthrallment or bondage; liberation … Useful english dictionary
dis|en|thral — dis|en|thrall or dis|en|thral «DIHS ehn THRL», transitive verb. to set free from enthrallment or bondage; liberate: »In straits and in distress Thou didst me disenthrall (Milton) … Useful english dictionary
en|thral|ment — en|thrall|ment or en|thral|ment «ehn THRL muhnt», noun. 1. the act of enthralling: »the enthrallment of captives. 2. the state of being enthralled. 3. anything that enthralls or subjugates … Useful english dictionary
en|thral — en|thrall or en|thral «ehn THRL», transitive verb, thralled, thrall|ing. 1. to captivate; fascinate; charm: »The explorer enthralled the audience with the story of his exciting adventures. 2. to make a slave of; … Useful english dictionary
hy|pae|thral — «hih PEE thruhl, hy », adjective. open to the sky; having no roof, as a building. Also, hypethral. ╂[< Latin hypaethrus (< Greek hýpaithros < hypo under + aith air, ether) + English al1] … Useful english dictionary
hy|pe|thral — «hih PEE thruhl, hy », adjective. = hypaethral. (Cf. ↑hypaethral) … Useful english dictionary