These are the meanings of the letters TYRONE when you unscramble them.
- Entry (n.)
A putting upon record in proper form and order.
- Entry (n.)
That by which entrance is made; a passage leading into a house or other building, or to a room; a vestibule; an adit, as of a mine.
- Entry (n.)
The act in addition to breaking essential to constitute the offense or burglary.
- Entry (n.)
The act of entering or passing into or upon; entrance; ingress; hence, beginnings or first attempts; as, the entry of a person into a house or city; the entry of a river into the sea; the entry of air into the blood; an entry upon an undertaking.
- Entry (n.)
The act of making or entering a record; a setting down in writing the particulars, as of a transaction; as, an entry of a sale; also, that which is entered; an item.
- Entry (n.)
The actual taking possession of lands or tenements, by entering or setting foot on them.
- Entry (n.)
The exhibition or depositing of a ship's papers at the customhouse, to procure license to land goods; or the giving an account of a ship's cargo to the officer of the customs, and obtaining his permission to land the goods. See Enter, v. t., 8, and Entrance, n., 5.
- Noter (n.)
An annotator.
- Noter (n.)
One who takes notice.
- onery (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Tenor (n.)
A person who sings the tenor, or the instrument that play it.
- Tenor (n.)
A state of holding on in a continuous course; manner of continuity; constant mode; general tendency; course; career.
- Tenor (n.)
An exact copy of a writing, set forth in the words and figures of it. It differs from purport, which is only the substance or general import of the instrument.
- Tenor (n.)
Stamp; character; nature.
- Tenor (n.)
That course of thought which holds on through a discourse; the general drift or course of thought; purport; intent; meaning; understanding.
- Tenor (n.)
The higher of the two kinds of voices usually belonging to adult males; hence, the part in the harmony adapted to this voice; the second of the four parts in the scale of sounds, reckoning from the base, and originally the air, to which the other parts were auxillary.
- toner (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- toney (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Toyer (n.)
One who toys; one who is full of trifling tricks; a trifler.
- Trone (n.)
A small drain.
- Trone (n.)
A throne.
- Trone (n.)
Alt. of Trones