Erin |
in literary usage, Ireland. |
Erin go bragh |
Ireland forever (Irish Gaelic); (used to express loyalty to Ireland). |
Eris |
in Greek mythology, the goddess of conflict or discord; Discordia. |
Eritrea |
a country on the Red Sea, bordered by Sudan and Ethiopia; formerly a province of Ethiopia. |
Erlenmeyer flask |
a conical laboratory flask with a broad, flat base and a short, narrow neck, used to mix liquids by hand. |
ermine |
any of various weasels of northern regions that have white coats with black tail tips in the winter. [2 definitions] |
erne |
any of several European sea eagles. |
Ernest Hemingway |
U.S. fiction writer who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1954 (b.1899--d.1961). |
erode |
to slowly wear away, eat into, or destroy by the action of friction, or as if by friction. [3 definitions] |
erogenous |
tending to arouse sexual desire or result in sexual gratification when stimulated. |
Eros |
in Greek mythology, the god of love; Cupid; Amor. [4 definitions] |
erosion |
the process or condition of eroding. [2 definitions] |
erosive |
tending to cause erosion. |
erotic |
of or pertaining to sexual love. [3 definitions] |
erotica |
(used with a sing. or pl. verb) books, pictures, and the like that tend to arouse sexual feelings; erotic literature or art. |
eroticism |
sexual or erotic quality or character. [2 definitions] |
eroticize |
to arouse sexually, or to make erotic. |
erotogenic |
extremely sensitive to sexual stimulation; erogenous. |
erotomania |
sexual desire that is abnormally strong and prolonged. |
err |
to make a mistake. [3 definitions] |
errand |
a quick journey or side trip taken to fulfill a particular purpose. [2 definitions] |