Table of Contents
1. chin-wagging
noun. light informal conversation for social occasions.
Rhymes with Chin Dynasty
2. Kuki-Chin
noun. Kamarupan languages spoken in western Burma and Bangladesh and easternmost India.
3. chin-wag
noun. light informal conversation for social occasions.
4. dynasty
noun. ['ˈdaɪnəsti'] a sequence of powerful leaders in the same family.
Synonyms
- Stuart
- Hanover
- Ch'ing dynasty
- Plantagenet
- Merovingian
- Liao dynasty
- Carolingian dynasty
- Zhou
- Merovingian dynasty
- Tang dynasty
- Shang dynasty
- Yuan dynasty
- Ommiad
- Tang
- Seljuk
- Liao
- Windsor
- Qing dynasty
- Ch'ing
- Zhou dynasty
- Flavian dynasty
- Omayyad
- Chow dynasty
- family
- Lancastrian line
- family line
- Song
- Yuan
- Hohenzollern
- Ottoman
- Shang
- Chow
- phratry
- Romanov
- Ming
- Han dynasty
- Chou dynasty
- Umayyad
- Wei
- Han
- Romanoff
- Manchu dynasty
- Qin
- Wei dynasty
- Ptolemy
- Plantagenet line
- Ptolemaic dynasty
- House of Windsor
- Qin dynasty
- folk
- sept
- Valois
- Song dynasty
- House of York
- Ottoman dynasty
- Habsburg
- Ming dynasty
- Hapsburg
- Lancaster
- House of Lancaster
- Manchu
- Chou
- kinfolk
- Ch'in
- House of Hanover
- Capetian dynasty
- York
- kinsfolk
- Hanoverian line
- Qing
- Bourbon
- Carlovingian dynasty
- Ch'in dynasty
- Saxe-Coburg-Gotha
- Sung dynasty
- House of Tudor
- Bourbon dynasty
- Sung
- Tudor
Antonyms
Etymology
- dynastia (Latin)
- δυναστεία (Ancient Greek (to 1453))
5. chin-up
noun. an arm exercise performed by pulling yourself up on a horizontal bar until your chin is level with the bar.
Synonyms
6. chin
noun. ['ˈtʃɪn'] the protruding part of the lower jaw.
Synonyms
Antonyms
Etymology
- chin (Middle English (1100-1500))
- cine (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
7. chin
verb. ['ˈtʃɪn'] raise oneself while hanging from one's hands until one's chin is level with the support bar.
Etymology
- chin (Middle English (1100-1500))
- cine (Old English (ca. 450-1100))
8. Chin
noun. Kamarupan languages spoken in western Burma and Bangladesh and easternmost India.