ATHRILL | • athrill adj. Thrilled, feeling a thrill; trembling or vibrating (With an emotion, movement, etc.). • ATHRILL adv. (archaic) in a thrill. |
BOTHRIA | • bothria n. Plural of bothrium. • BOTHRIUM n. (Latin) a groove on a tapeworm. |
THRIFTS | • thrifts n. Plural of thrift. • Thrifts prop.n. Plural of Thrift. • THRIFT n. frugality or economy. |
THRIFTY | • thrifty adj. Showing thrift; economical; frugal. • thrifty adj. (Dated) Thriving, prosperous, successful; (of an animal or plant) growing rapidly or vigorously. • thrifty adj. (Obsolete) Preserved by thrift; carefully managed. |
THRILLS | • thrills n. Plural of thrill. • thrills v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of thrill. • THRILL v. to excite greatly. |
THRILLY | • thrilly adj. Exciting, producing a thrill. • THRILLY adj. full of thrills. |
THRIMSA | • thrimsa n. (Historical) An Anglo-Saxon denomination of money; it may or may not have been a coin. • THRIMSA n. (Old English) an Anglo-Saxon gold coin, also THRYMSA. |
THRISTS | • thrists v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of thrist. • THRIST v. (Spenser) to thirst. |
THRISTY | • thristy adj. Obsolete form of thirsty. • THRISTY adj. (Spenser) thirsty. |
THRIVED | • thrived v. Simple past tense and past participle of thrive. • THRIVE v. to grow vigorously. |
THRIVEN | • thriven v. Past participle of thrive. • THRIVE v. to grow vigorously. |
THRIVER | • thriver n. One who thrives, or prospers. • THRIVER n. one who thrives. |
THRIVES | • thrives v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of thrive. • THRIVE v. to grow vigorously. |